
I 

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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 



C^up. Co|iijiifl^l !^- 

Shell" .S 2 D 



UNITED STATES OF AIEBIf A. 




Watered according to Acl of Congrcjs In the Vear iSS;, by S. W, IJarlco & 
in the gSceoftha Librarian nf rnmn-ru .> W..ki__«~_ n r< 



AUG. CAST BANK NOTES, UTH0.CO-ST.LOUISaN.X 



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}c ^okb UshBHsf^iicnt for W}c j^cgiifciHon of |jOW j^riecs. 




RETAIL 



j STOVES. __^ rnnnc cLOTHmc'l''^'''-^''^"-fltnj>nf»^j-i^"»rt"t 

HARDWARE DRY LU U U tJ BOOTS.$H0EsHfe''--TJ^"^°l- '--'^l^THi NC bo otj^ jhoes 
\cROCK ERr NOTIONS CAR/TTO. F 



:^^ WknlJt^ai^ Ir Sjet^il JHej-jcti^tii. 



WHOLESALE AND RETAIL UTAH DRIED FRUITS, 

Dry Goods, Family Qroceries, Flour k Provisions. 



St. John Kirkham's & Go's. Boots and Shoes, 
White Granite Crockery & Earthenware, 
Tumblers, Glassware and Lamps, 

Rathbone Cooking and Heating Stoves, 
Ingrain and Ihree-Ply Carpets. 



Men's and Boy's Clothing, 

Floor Oil Cloths and Mattings, 

Men's and Youth's Fur & '. ool Hats, 

Family Hardware & Farming Implements, 
Etc., Etc. 



THE BEST HOUSE IX UTAH FOR FARMER AND FAMILY TRADE- 



, SEND FOR OUR PRICES REFOKE PURCHASING ELSEWHERE 

S^^i^T X^^f^I^E CIT^-. 



Tlie Utali 8c Nevada Rj. 

B^s; to aiiiioii:i(e tlie Opening of their 

NEW BATHING & PLEASURE RESORT 



Geo. HUSLER, PROPRItTOR. 



Henry Wallace, Manager. 



ARFIELD KEACH 



ON THE SOUTHERN SHORE OF 

Tmm GMMAT BAIiT I^AKHl 

(A few miniitrs ride from Salt Lake City) 

Under the Management of the 
PACIFIC HOTEL COMPANY. 



Among the Chief Features of this New Resort are 

A Mag:nificeiit Pavilion, (Dimensions, 1G5 by 05 feet), 
built over the water 400 feet from the shore (appioached by a 
covered pier over 300 feet in lenulh), with a tower in tlie centre 
overlooking the lake on all sides, thus affording a picturesque 
view of bathers and the surrounding mountain scenery. 

A Graucl Concert will be given in the Pavilion every 
afternoon during the season by a first-class orchestra of talented 
soloists. 

Elegant Dressing' Rooms, each provided with a sta- 
tionary wash-stand, shower bath for rinsing off the salt water of 
the Lake, mirror, and every comfort and convenience for bathers 
suggested by long experience, are located on the shore of the 
Lake, where polite male and female employes will be in constant 
attendance. 

Bathing: Snits for ladies, gentlemen and children may be 
had on application. 

A Handsome Station Building', (Dimensions, 350 by 
50 feet), of the latest improved design, with high tower in the 
centre, from which a view may be had on a clear day of promi- 
nent mountain ranges over 100 miles distant. 

The Saloon, located in the station building, is equipped 
with all the appoinments ol a first-class establishment, where 
the choicest brands of liquors and cigars will be dispensed by 
polite attaches 

The Bestaurant and Lunch Stand will present a bill 
of fare equal to any first-class hotel in the West at moderate 
prices. 

The Bathing' Grounds.— This is the only bathing resort 
on the entire lake shore having a clean sandy beach, free from 
mud, rocks and offensive vegetable matter. Ladies and children 
may bathe here with perfect safety, owing to the density of the 
water being so great that one may float upon the surface without 
an effort. 

An additional attractiun of this delightful resort is " Tlie 
Giant's Cave," (only a sliort distance from the beach;, an 
opening extending over 300 feet ii\to the mountain side, with a 
ceiling ranging in heighth from 10 to 75 feet. 



Trains run at frequent intervals during the day. 

For time of departure, see Salt Lake daily papers. 



f'i^Ai^ FOi^ THB Round Tpmp, Onlt 50c. 

W. ir. RITER. S. F. FENTON, 

Sup't. G. F. & P. Agt. 



FAH CRACKER FACTORY 



MANUFACTURERS OF THE CELEBRATED 

^ilurr ||rand of |ine f prbrji 

Salt Lake City, - Utah. 



VE desire to call attention to our Fine Cakes packed 
in one pound cartons; also our fine Sodas, packed 
in one, two and five pound cartons. 



tl^All Goods Made of the Best Material.' 



GE0. F. BROOKS, 



DEALER IN 



StapleiFaiiey Groceries 

Tobacco, Cigars, Flour & Feed. 



-SOLE AGENTS FOR- 

.3- 



WM. HUME'S COLUMBIA RIVER SALMON 



GORMACK'S NUDAVENE TLAKES. 

26 W. FIRST SOUTH STREET, 
♦ SALT LAKE CITY. 



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RESIDENCE OF MATTHEW CULLEN. 




O O t) o 



1)0 000000000 



ooooooooooooooooo 



M The Leading Hotel of Salt Lake City 'M 



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H'M' 



/IvK 



r I "111 IS House ponUiins 12-') liomiis, all well litjliU'tl, eucli apartnu'nt iK'iiijr at Iwtst 12 x 6 feet. It was re- 
opened on tlie 20tli of January last, after heinu: elegantl_y refurnished and thoroughly renovatetl throughout. 
All modern ap])liaiiees for the eonvenicnct' of guests are to lie found here, including eleetrie call-hells, telephone, 
electric and incandescent ligiit, etc., etc 






^THE CUISINE IS THE BEST THE WEST AFFORDS^^ ^ 



i 



The chef having the reputation of hciug unexcelled in iiis art west of the Missouri. 



-#'l'oupists, Excursion Parties and I'lavelers Qenerally#- 

Who purpose stopping in Salt Lake are respectfully itivite<l to call. 

*.J. H. & F. M. \//m WORia, 

Frojjridorn, 



VALLEY * HeaSE, 

ON'LV mill OPPUSITE TEJiPLS; AND TABEK.NAI^LE. 

SJ^LT L^iCE CITY. 



HEADQUARTERS FOR TOURISTS. 

;< Pas Hotel to all DEl'OTS and Points , 




Three Commodious Cottages connected with Hotel. Baths 
and all modern conveniences. Refitted and refurnished through- 
out. Rates, $1.50 to !f2 per day; Special rates to large parties. 

HUBERT L. HALL, Prop. 



Illiam White, 
ohn H. White. 



Wnn. L. White. 
David H. White. 



VHITE & SONS, 
Butchers & Cattle Dealers 




Buy and ^ell Caltle, .SIil-c|>, Ho^s. Large (iaine in .Season, 
and evervthiny connected with the business. Packers 
of Stricliv Choice UTAH RAISED PORK, Smoked 
Hams, Breakfast Bacon, and dry Salt Sides. All 
kinds of Sausajre, Home Rendered Lard, etc., etc. 

SHIPPERS OF LIVE CATTLE AND IMPORTERS OF DRESSED MEAT. 



Dealers in Thoroughbred Hereford Cattle. 
88 W. FIRST 801 TH STREET, 

SALT LAKE CITY. 




Book of Mormon, 

Voice of Warning, 

Spencer's Lelters, 

Docs the Bible sanction Polygamy? 

On Marriage, 



35. *i-75, ?.! 50.85. S.i ^S 

50c., $1, 81.25, $1.65. 

ii 10,81.25, $1.60, $2.25. 



M'ill Send to your Address, postpaid, anif of the foilovtinff 
BOOKS, relating to the Mormons: 



Salt Lake City, Illustrated, 30c. 
Are We of Israel ? - 25c. 



Doctrine and Covenantb, 
Key to Theology, 
Catechism lor Children, 
The Utah Pioneers, 
The Spaulding Story, 



Album View 
Items of Chu 



; of Salt Lake, 50c. 
ch History, - 15c. 



$i,$i.JS,Ji.7S,$2 50,S3,»3.2S. 

50c., 7sc., $1, $1 so, 81 60, $2. 

3<x:.. »S<:. 

IOC. 
2SC 



Das Buch Mormon, cloth, (Gi 

Gesangbuch d Heiligen d. 1. Tuge, 

Ein Stimme der Warnung, 

Die Koestliche Perle, 

Le Livre dc Mormon, (French,) 




Mvi>K 



Constitutional Rights, 
= Toils, or the Martyr: 
Days, 



of the Latter 



tfandbook 01 
The Myth of the Manuscript Found, 2Sc. 
IlandlK)ok of Reference, . 50c. 

History of the Mormon Battalion, $3. 
The Tennessee Massacre, - 25c. 



StarUing Revelations tor Saints and Sinneri, soc. 
Heroines ol Mormondom, - • 25c. 

The Martyrs. - - - 50c. 

Why we Practice Plural Marriage, - 25c. 

Mountain Meadows Massacre and Supplement, 25c. 



Early Scenes in Church History, 
Orson Pratt's Works, 
Mormon Doctrine, 
Unlawful Cohabiution, 
Blood Atonement, 



SPECIMENS OF NATURAL SALT, EVAPORATIONS OF THE GREAT SALT LAKE, FROM 50C. TO $1, POSTPAID. 



72 Main Street, f 

SALl liLAKE OYWm. ^ 



TTT f^iFliiiiimifii ^lhlia|f^h[^ 




NORTH SIDE SECOND SOUTH STREET, LOOKING WEST FROIVl MAIN. 





DESERET NEWS, LION HOUSE AND BEE-HIVE HOUSE. 



Salt Uake Gity. 



■UTT-i^iEa:. 




ITHIN the memory of the present gen- 
eration the map of North America 
represented the region now covered 
l)y the Territories of LTtali, Wyom- 
ing, Arizona, the State of Nevada 
and the western ])art of Colorado, as 
the (xrcat American Desert. In fact> 
nntil tlie exjilorations of Bonneville 
and F'remont, little if anything was 
known of its character. As early as 1833, Captain Bon- 
neville had trappers on Green lliver — a tribntary of the 
Colorado — and in July of that year he sent a j)arty from 
that point westward, to explore this v;ist region. Passing 
down what is now called Ogden River, they discovered tlie 
Great Salt Lake. Colonel Fremont came atler\\'ards, in 
1842, and remained exploring in and around the Great 
Desert until 1846, but save for these travelers, the country 
was visited only by trappers and hunters. The advent of 
civilization into the Great American Desert was on the 
arrival of the Mormon Pioneers, after their exodus from 
Nauvoo, in Illinois. On the 21st of July, 1847, Orson 
Pratt, Erastus Snow and George A. Smith, a(H'onipanied 
by six or seven others, the avant couriers of the main body, 
rode into Great Salt Lake Valley, to a point west of the 
mouth of the canyon then called "The (Joldcn Pass," and 
now known as Parley's Canyon. They found the moun- 
tain streams pure, springs abundant, and luxuriant grass 
covering the river bottoms, but the dryer places were in- 
fested with large crickets; they also dis<;overed sortie sul- 
phur springs, and were impressed with the idea that the soil 
generally was unfit for cultivation. This they had been 
led to expect, its the opinion of the trappers who had vis- 
ited this region, wa.s, that the coiuitry was unfitted for 
agriculture. Colonel Bridger, himself an old trapjier and 
mountaineer, is credited with having oftertxl a thousuid 
dollars for the first bushel of grain or ear of corn raised in 
the Valley of the Gresit Salt Lake. Major Harris, also 
an old traveler in Oregon and California, spoke unfavor- 
ably of the oountry as a ])la(« for settlement. Until lately, 
the historian has done but little either in examining into 



or describing the history of Salt Lake City — why, is con- 
jectural. For it is a history replete with early adventures 
of Indian depredations, of privations, suffering and of 
marvellous success. A tale of men with hearts of oak 
and nerves of steel, who were truly pioneers — who itkuIc 
roads, leveled canyons, built bridges, and brought seem- 
ing improbabilities within the range of possibility. On 
the 24th of July, 1847, the main body of Mormons, mim- 
bering about 14.'5 men, arrive<l in the valley, with Presi- 
dent Brigham Young at their head. Plowing and planting 
inuuediatel}' began. The very dry ground was irrigad'd 
by damming up one of the creeks, a trench being dug from 
it to the land designed to be watered. During tlie night 
the whole tract desired to be cultivated, was irrigated. 
Thus began in Utah the system of irrigation to which 
the wealth, the beauty and the habitability of Utah is due 
almost wholly to-day. It has been the s;ilvatit)n, tin; very 
making of the Territory. S<j Salt Lake City — the half- 
way house of California, the oasis, the rest midst the 
desert, the embryo empire of the intermountain region was 
founded. About a week after the arrival of this ]>arty — the 
main body of the pioneers — a detachment of the Mormnn 
Battalion — arrived, with some others, thus increasing the 
number in the camp tx) aI)out 400. Within a month after tiieir 
arrival the colonists had laid out a fort, built twenty-seven log 
houses, ])lowed eighty-four acres and j)lanted them with corn, 
potatoes, bctans, buckwheat, turnips, etc., and had manufiic- 
tured 125 bushels of salt. The new settlement was called 
the "City of the Gretit Salt Lake" or "Great Salt Lake 
City," as it soon became named. In the month of June, 
1848, the fields were invadetl by the crickets, which came 
from the mountains in vast numbers and steadily advanc- 
ing on the growing crops, began to devour them. The 
peoj)le were powerless against this enemy, and it appearcsl 
as though starvation was inevitable, when, to their great 
relief", ])erhaps half the cro])s were saved by an immense Hock 
of sea gulls which suddeidy appeareil upon the scene, and 
ravenously devoured tiie crickets. These gulls are su|)- 
posed to have come from the Gulf of California. \\'ithin 
a year the po))ulation had increase<l to abotit se\-entcen 
hundred, 450 buildings had been erected, thret^ saw mills 
and a flouring mill. During the winter of fiiis year tiic 



mercury is;recM)rded as having gone as low as thirty-three 
degrees below zero, Fahrenheit. A faint idea of the 
scarcity of provisions in !the settlement may be gained 
from the fact that a peck of potatoes sold for five dollars, and 
was considered cheap. The first post office in the city was 
opened in March, with Joseph L. Heywood as postmaster. 
In the months of Mayor June, 1849, parties from the 
east, e)i route for the California gold mines, first arrived, they 
brought with them all kinds of merchandise, wagons, tools 
and farming implements, which they gladly disposed of at 
a cheap rate in exchange for provisions. During the 
Spring and Summer a State Constitution was adopted, and 
A. W. Babbit, Esq., sent as Delegate to Congress, asking 
for admission into the Union. A year later, Captain 



in defending their homes from the depredations of Ute Indi- 
ans. A battle was fought close by what is now calletl 
Provo, in which several were lulled on both sides. ' There 
wa.s, from this time on, for several years, a recurrence of 
these Indian troubles, so much so that Governor Brigham 
Young issued a proclamation ordering the Territ<5rial 
Militia to be kept in constant readiness for marching 
against the Red Men. In all the Indian ^^'ars the people 
of this city were called upon to contribute t<:) those needing 
it, by both men and means. In June, 1850, the De.seret 
News was published ; the issue was a very small-sized 
paper at first, and appeared semi-occasionally, sometimea 
on wrapping paper, on account of the then great distance 
from supplies — being " a thousand miles from any- 




Stansbury, who had been for some time engaged in a tojjo- 
graphical survey of the Great Salt Lake, completed his 
cxi)lorations. Parties had already commenced to branch 
out fioJi Great Salt Lake City, and settle what are now 
Davis, Weber, Utah, Tooele, Juab and San|)cte Counties. 
In I)eccinl)er of this year the first Sunday School was 
establL-ihed. In consequence of the scanty harvests bread- 
stuffs and other provisions became very s(-;u'ce, and many 
people were compelled to eat ra\v hides, anil dig segos and 
thistle roots to sustain life. Much suffering was a\oidcd, 
however, by those who had provisions, generously but of 
course sparingly, dividing with those less fortunate. The 
Indians from the first wore annoying ami troublesome, and 
in February, 1850, the colonists generally were cidletl on 
to assist the handful of pioneers settletl in Utiih County, 



where." On January 11, 1851, Grejit Salt Lake City 
was incorporatal, with Jcdediah M. Grant as Mayor, 
and in February, Brigham Young took the oath ol 
ofiice as the first Governor of Utah Te/ritory. During 
the Spring school houses were built in mo.st of the wards. 
There were now about 30,000 inhabifcuits in Utah 
Territory, of which nearly 5,000 were residents of 
this city. The Great Salt Lake, which now h:us a world 
wide reputation, was at that early periixl, recognized as a 
health resort, and on the 4th of Jtdy, the inhabitants of 
the city celebrated the Nation's birthday by an cxeui-sion 
to Black Rock and a bathe in the briny waves. On 
September 22, tiic fii-st Legislature of Utah Territory con- 
vened in Great Salt Lake City, and in November the Uni- 
versity of the State (of U^ejcet waji oiieued.^ Ou January 




SPRING VIEW 










bUMMER VIEW. 

RESIDENCE OF ROBERT DYE. 




F^ AUERBACH &. BRO.'S BLOCK 



DESEET'NEWS M., 



-Printers ami Puhlishcrs ol the 



Official Organ ot" the Chuirli of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day 

Saints, and OLDEST and MOST RELIABLE Paper 

in the Rocky .Mountain Regions. 

SUBSCRIPTION PRICES: 

Daily, $10.00. Semi-Weekly. $3.00. Weekly, 2.50 per Year. 



Ext'hi.sivo Piibli.shers of Standard ('liiir<-li Works. 



»6EIjEpii BOO^ /II]D JOB PI^IlFoE^S- f 

Having the Best Facilities for Work in this Line r.l nn> House in the Territor 



OWNERS OF THE 

DESERET PAPER MILL, 

And Manufacturers of Book, Ncivs and Wrapping Papers 
of all Grades. 

OFFICE: Corner South Temple and Main Streets, Salt 
Lake City, Utah. 



_P R.G A NIgED A. P. 1 860. 



jciul^citbu l^l^c |nsiiranee ^o. 



NEW YORK. 



CASN ASSETS, Jamcary /, 1887, 



$11,^10,0^8.00. 



BUSINESS RULES. 



PREMIUMS. The lowest safe rat«s. 

POLICY. As little restricted in terms as possible. 

NON-FORFKITURE. Seouretl in the Policy under the law of 

New York. 
SURRENDER VALUES tixed when the Policy is issued. See 

printed tables. 
DIVIDENDS niaile annually, commencing with the second year. 
MANAGEMENT steady, reliable, business-like. 
INVESTMENTS. Best .security sought, rather than the largest 

interest. 
PRINCIPAL OIIJECT. To secure a provision for ourself or for 

tlie family. 

BENEFICENT RESULTS. 
FAMILIES KENEFITED. Nearly 7,000. 

CLAIMS PAID. Over -tU, (100,000. 

RETURNED to Policy-holders over IfS.OOO.OOO of iurplua pre- 
miums in Dividends. 

FINANCIAL RESULTS. 

.4.SSETS, ♦11,310,058.00. 

SURPLUS, $2,205,100, by New York rule. 

If you want Insurance take our Low Premium Non-parlicipalin§ Policy. 
If you want Insurance and Dividends combined, take our Mutual Policy. 
If you want somelliing for your Old Ai/c take an Endowment Policy. 

S. W. DARKE & CO., Agents, 

SALT LAKE CITY. 



A Boarding School for Girls. 



^^ PLEASANT Home, with superior accommodations 
l-J in the Domestic Department. 

X^sX. A Thorough-Graduating Course, embracing 

Mathematics, Latin, Natural Sciences, History 
and EngHsh Literature. Careful attention given to Pupils 
taking Special Studies. 

Accomplished Teachers and Professors for Music, 
Painting and the Modern Languages. Apply to 

Rev. G. D. B. MILLER, 

SALT LAKE CITY. 



C3E0. SAVIkkE, 

J^T JSTO. 21 E. SEGOIsTID SOTJaTH ST., 

Kv- ps 1,11 hiiul the l^csi A<s»rtinenl ol 

Men's Boots and Sh.oes 

In Salt Lake (it v. All His Own .Make. 



LOOK AT THIS: 

Men's Calf and Kip Boots, ■ f^om $5.00 upwards, all Full Stock. 
Men's Calf and Kip Shoes. - - from $3.00 upwards, all Full Stock. 

Particular .Vttention given to Custom Work, and Repairing 
Promptlv .VtttMiiled to. -Vll Work |i;uaranteed First-class and 
with Despatch. IN lUISINK.-^S SIXTKEN YEARS. 

Ronembcr Ihe Place. No. 2r R. ^.econd South Si. 



TH0M/5S W. JENNINGS 

rmporter, .Intilier anil Retail n-iiler hi 

Clothing, Kats, Caps, Boots, Shoes 

.And (;r-:xrs- i-ir.msiii.xc, coods. 

# 



.JOSEPH W. TAYLOR, 

UTAH'S LEADING 

Undertaker c& Smbalmer 



-^ 



TRUNKS. 



VALISES. 



**f* 



•h-h*f 



53 W. First South Street, 

— Sy^LT LAKC- CITY. 




^ 



I carry the P'inest and 
Most Complete Line of 
(ortinsand Caskets and 
Cndertaker's Goods in 
I'tah at the lowest prices 
wholesale and retail. 

( Xlicc and Wareroonis 
never closed. 

TELEPHONE 361. 

23 W. TeS^L Sontli. 






!Dii¥ia 



9 



Is the Best House in Utah for Families to Buy 



aImIL kinbs of sijpfxies 



—Fresh Arrivals Daily of SEASONABLE MERCHANDISE in- 
Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Boots & Shoes, Agricultural Implements, 

Etc., of the Best Oualit\', at , the Lowest Prices. 



Columbia .' Bicycles i^ 



'WWS^^^^h 



AND TRICYCLES. 



V 



Best Machines in the World / \ 



AGENTS FOR 



-Sy /^ND Demorest Paper Patterns, Atlas High 

J^;^;^^^ s Explosive Powder, Oransje Sporting 

'^T^TfA/ClC S ^"^ Blasting Powder. 

We buy all kinds of Produce in Exchange 



BARNES & DAVIS, 128 Main St., Salt Lake City. 



§^a( ||kl^, $can and fimtram^ Ipwl, 

n^O. SI E. SEaOIsTID SOTJTH STI5.EET. 



Negotiates Loans and Invests Afotiey Carefully for No7i-residents. Has a Large List of Properties for Sale in both 

City and County. Searches Titles to Real Estate. 

STRANGERS MADE WELCOME. .-. 



-CALL AND SEE GEORGE. 



S 



PENCER HOUSE, 



mm 



][o. 252 f-hst East street, betWeeii Second and ^]\ui ^outh, 

S^^LT XjJLICE CIT"^, TJTJ^H. 



4i^- 



This Hotel is located in Post Office Block, surrounded by the largest and most l:)eautifiil Grovmds, Lawns 
and Shades of any Hotel in the City, and is a most popular resort for Tourists and Transients who lU'sire 

Beautiful Shaded Playgio\md for Children. Tlie Pioprietor of this House has lieen a resitk-nt of Utah 
for 40 years, and is therelbre well qnalilied to s^ive information, introductions, etc. No Runners employed. 'Have 
your Baggage checked on the Cars lor the S]5encer House. 




SECOND SOUTH STREET FROM MAIN, LOOKING EAST. 




NORTH SlOt 



16, 1852, a Tabernacle, 126 feet long and sixty-four feet 
wide, capable of seating nearly tliree thousjuul persons, was 
finisiied. The first company of European immigrants, witii 
thirty-one wagons, arrived (hiring the year. On the 6th 
day of ^ipril, 1853, the corner stones of the Temple were 
laid, and in August it was decided to build a "Spanish" 
wall of nuid, twelve feet high, six feet at base, around the 
city, as a protection against the Indians. It was nine miles 
in length, and portions of it remain to this day. The 
])ojiulation in October of this year was 6,000 souls. In 
January, 1 854, a mass meeting was held to memorialise 
Congress to construct a National Railroad from the Mis- 
souri River, via the South Pass and Great Salt Lake City, 
to the Tacifie Coa.st. During the Fall of this year, the first 
immigrants from Switzerland, Italy and Australia arrived. 
In 1855 scttlei-s had reached out as far as Salmon River, 
Idaho, and the southern part of Utah Territory. During 
the Summer grasshoppers did serious damage to the crops, 
dc-Jtroying nearly everything green in many parts of the 
Territory. The loss was aggravatefl by drouth, the eom- 
bine<l evils causing a great failure in crops. A large num- 
ber of Mormon missionaries left Great Salt Ijake City for the 
Ea.stern States and Europe, and the Horticultural Society, 
and a number of other societies, were organizetl during this 
year. In the early part of 1856 there was a great scarci- 
ty of provisions and many domestic animals died of starv- 
ation. For months some families knew not the taste of 
bread — bran and shorts being considered luxuries. Small- 
pox was brought into the valley in July by immigrants 
from Mississijipi. The first fire department was organized 
in October. On account of the ejirly winter, some com- 
panies of immigrants, crossing the plains with hand-carts, 
were overtaken in the mountains by snow storms and se- 
verely cold weather. Word was brought that they were 
perishing in the mountains and the people innuediately 
went to their rescue with men and provisions, but not 
before many of the immigrants had died from want and ex- 
posure. This winter was excessively severe, snow falling 
to a depth of eight feet in various parts of the valley. 
Tlie harvest of 1857 was the best Utah had had up to 
tliat time. During this fall the "Utah Army" was sent, 
under Colonel A. S. Johnston, to settle difficulties which 
were reported by Judge Drummond, AV. F. Magraw and 
otiicrs, to have grown up between the Territorial Officers, 
the Federal Officials and the Government. In March, 1858, 
the citizens of Great Salt Lake City and the settlements 
north of it, agreed to abandon their homes and "go south," 
being under the impression that the approaching army 
was sent to destroy them. By the month of June, Gov- 
ernor Gumming and the {x^ce commissioners having 
arrival and investigated matters, the difficulties were peace- 
ably adjusted, President Buchanan issuing a proclamation 
of jiardon. The army passed through Great Salt Lake 
City, locating at Camp Floyd, about forty miles south- 
west, and the people returned to their deserted homes and 
resumed their accustomed labors. In Novend)er, 1858, 
the Vidley Twn newspaper matlc its appearance. In 1859, 



the first number of the MounUiine-er was published. April 7, 
1860, the first pony express from the West arrival, and on the 
9th the first frt)m the east; four days from Sacramento 
and six days from St. Joseph, Mo. In July, 1861, 
General Johnston with the army, was orderal to the States 
on account of the breaking out of the Civil War, and the 
equipments and jirovisions of the Unital States army in 
Utah were disi)osed of at auction. It was estimatwl that 
§4,000,000 worth of goods were sold for §100,000. In 
October connection was made with the outside world by a 
t«legrai)h line. In the Spring of 1862, the Theatre, a 
building 175 feet long, 80 feet wide, and GO feet from flo(ir 
to ceiling, seating comfortably 1,700 people — one of the 
best theatres in the Union — w;is completed and oj)ened to 
the public. During the siune Spring the Indians in the 
neighborhood of Fort Bridger, having destroyed the nuu"l 
stations, coaches and mail bags, and killed the stage driv- 
ers, President Lincoln called for a company of Cavalry, 
and in April, Lot Smith's coni])any of 100 men was mus- 
tered into service by Chief Justice Kinney, and left the 
city to protect the mail route. The expalition was a very 
hazardous and toilsome one. Colonel P. E. Connor with 
the California Volunteers, arrived on October 20, and 
located at Camp Douglas, the present site of Fort Douglas. 
The immigration this year numberal over 5,000 people, 
all coming by teams and wagons. Settlers from this city 
and other places having located in what are termed the 
southern settlements, raised about 100,000 pounds of cot- 
ton this year. In January, 1863, Colonel Connor with 
some 200 troops, defeated a band of 400 Shoshone 
Indians in a ravine, near Bear River, in which fourteen 
soldiers were killal and forty-nine more woundal, and 224 
Indians were killed; they also had other engagements with 
Indians near Cedar Fort, Spanish Fork and Pleasant 
Grove. The Indians were also fpiite hostile on the mail 
route west of Salt Lake. In September a woolen flietory 
on Canyon Creek, in Salt Lake County, was put in ojieni- 
tion. In November, Colonel Coiuior iss\ial a circular 
giving a permit to the soldiers to prospect for mines, he 
having evidence that the Territory possessal rich veins of 
gold, silver and other minerals. The Daily Mdvttc was first 
issual this month. In July, 1864, the Daily Telegraph 
was published by T. B. 11. Stenhouse, and the Peep o' 
Day made its apiicaranee. Speaker Colfax, Governor 
Bross, accomjianied by the City Council and some 
leading merchants, drove over to Great Salt Lake. 
During this year, several of the jiromincnt men of the city 
made an efibrt to establish a landing on the Colorado River, 
near the southern border of the Territory, known as Call- 
ville, through which it was hojied an easy avenue for the 
marketing of the products of the Territory would be found, 
as there was no conuunnication with the outside nuu-kcts 
by either railroad or water, at that date. In this year, also, 
the first mining <listricts were loratal, the fir>* mining com- 
])anies incorporated, and the first smelting furnaces built, 
they being created about seven miles south of the city. In 
July, 1867, myriads of grasshoppers appcan<l and did 



great damage to the crops, devasting every green field in 
Salt Lake Valley within twenty-four hours afler their 
appearance. On October 6, the large Tabernacle was com- 
pleted ; this structure is 250 feet long, 1 50 feet wide, and 
its immense roof is arched without a pillar ; the estimated 
seating capacity is 1 0,000. Duri ng the next year, the citizens 
commenced an organized warfare against grasshoppers, 
whose numbers, voracity and destructiveness were appalling. 
The Indian troubles were now mostly ended, Colonel Irish 
and Colonel Head Iiaving had many big talks and made 
treaties with the different bands. This year, Zion's Co- 
operative Mercantile Institution commenced operations ; 
the institution now occupies a four-story building includ- 
i ng basement, having a frontage of ninety-eight feet and a 
depth of 319 feet, on the Main Street. It has branch 
liouses in Provo, Ogden and Logan, Utah, and at Soda 
Springs, Idaho. Its stock in tratle averages over a million 
dollars. In May, 1869, a banking concern, which has 
grown into the present Deseret National Bank, commenced 
business. The University of Deseret was opened. The 
first shipment of Utah ore to California was made by 
Woodhull Brothers from Little Cottonwood to T. H. Selby 
of San Francisco. In October, a mass meeting was held 
with a view of again appealing to Congress to have Utali 
admitted as a State. The Utah Magazine, which had been 
published since January, 1868, under the editorial charge 
of E. L. T. Harrison, merged into the Mormon Tribune, 
from which has grown the Daily Ti-ibune, now published 
here, one of the largest daily pajiers between Chicago and 
San Francisco. On January 10, 1870, the last rail of the 
Utah Central Railroad was laid and the last spike driven 
by Brigham Young in the presence of 15,000 jieople. This 
was the inauguration of a new era in the growth and com- 
merce of the city. Hitherto, all importations had to be 
freighted a thousand miles by ox or mule teams and all 
the settlers had to tramp this weary road over vast and 
arid plains and toilsome mountains. Honorable W. H. 
Hoojjer made his famous "j)lea for religious liberty," in 
behalf of the Mormon people, in the House of Represen- 
tatives at Washington. The Liberal j)arty was organized 
and the Female Suffrage Bill was passed. In June, the 
J)ai/y Herald was first issued by E. Jj. Sloan, W. C. 
Dunbar and John T. Caine, the former of tliese gentlemen 
<lying in the year 1874. The pajier has been under the 
<'ditorial care of Mr. Byron Groo most of the time since. 
Mr. W. S. Godbe became somewhat prominent for his efforts 
with President Grant, in modifying the j)olicy projected by 
Vice-President Colfax and Governor Shaffer of forcing a 
rupture with the Mormon leaders. In September, 1871, 
the corner stone of the Catholic Church, an unimposing 
brick building in the heart of the city, wiis laid, the mis- 
sion Ijeing under the care of the Reverend Father Scanlan, 
now the liishop of the Dioc&se of Utah. In November, 
the corner stone of the Methodist Episcopal Church was 
laiil. It is one of the most commanding buildings, in size 
and architectural appearand, in the city, — a brick structure 
<if modern style. In 1872, the Salt I^ake City Street 



Railway Company wa.s organized. In the Spring of this 
year, Thomas Fitch, George Q. Cannon and Frank Fuller 
lefl for Washington, a,s delegates to Congress, to present 
the claims of the proposed State of Deseret. In September, 
General Morrow made another treaty of peace with the 
Indians. In October, a delegation of Ute Indians, accom- 
panied by Doctor Dodge, left for Washington, where they 
had an interview with President Grant. In November, 
the Gcrmania Smelting and Refining Work.s — the first of 
the kind in Utah — cijuimenced operations. In May, 1874, 
Sf. Mark's Cathedral was consecrated. It is a fine struc- 
ture, built of stone, having a handsome auditorium, with 
a basement which is usetl for Sabbath and day schools, and 
in October the Presbyterian Church was dedicated. In 
January, 1875, the Utah Western, now the Utah and 
Nevada Railway, was opened for traffic to Black Rock, a 
bathing resort on the shores of the Great Salt I^ake. In 
March, the trial of George Reynolds was commenced in 
the Third District Court, the jury bringing in a verdict of 
guilty. This wa.s a case agreed upon to test the constitu- 
tionality of the law passed by Congress, in 1862, against 
polygamy. It was, in the month of January, 1879, de- 
cided by the United States Supreme Court at Washington, 
the Court unanimously confirming the constitutionality of 
the Anti-Polygamy Act. In October, President Grant 
visited Salt Lake City and held a public reception in the 
Walker House ; before leaving, he honored the late Hon- 
orable William Jennings by a personal visit at the Devereux 
House. In Aj)ril, 1876, forty tons of powder, in magazine-s 
immediatel)' north of the city, exploded, resulting in the 
loss of four lives and great destruction of property. Dom 
Pedro, Emperor of Brazil, arrived on a visit, also Earl 
Dufferin, Governor-General of Canada. In June, a sudden 
melting of the snow in the mountains caused heavy floods. 
The Bihuben, a newspaper in the Danish language, was 
published. Brigham Young, the founder of Salt Lake 
City, and, in fact, of Utah, after an eventful life, died at 
his residence on the 29th of August, 1877. In September i 
of the same year, the corner stone of the Assembly Hall, | 
the projection of which we might truthfully say wa.s the 
last jjublic act of Brigham Young's life, was laid. The 
design is inii(pie and it is one of the attractions of the city, 
the ceiling being ]>ainted with pictures representing events 
in the C-hurch history and showing paintings of the several 
Mormon temples. In the month of April, 1879, the first 
Utah wheat was shi])petl to Liverpool, San Francisco, 
by S. W. Sears, and in May, 1880, the corner stone 
of St. Paul's Chajiel Mere laid, a stone structure, built 
and owned by the Episcopal Church, its design and sur- 
roundings being very attractive. In September, President 
Hayes and party visited Salt Lake ; and in December, the 
Utah Eastern Railway was constructed from Coalville to 
Park City, principally by Salt Lake capital. After the 
death of Brigham Young the Twelve Apostles had con- 
trolled the affairs of the dominant church, but in October , 
John Taylor was elected President, with Greorge Q. I 
Cannon and Joseph F. Smith as counsellors. In August, 




RESIDENCE OF DR. J. M. BENEDICT 




HEESCH & ELLERBECK BUILDING. 



OENHALTERS SODA WORKS. 




SOUTH SIDE 1st SOUTH STREET, FROM MAIN LOOKING EAST. 




RESIDEN^L Of v^uJ. A. LOWE. 



RESIDENCE OF DR. C W. HIGGINS. 



1881, the comer stones of the AValker Opera House were 
laid. The building was startetl as the Academy uf Music, 
under the auspices of the McKenzie Temperance Reform 
Club, but subsef|uently fell into the hands of the Walker 
Brothers; it is 165 feet long, 67 fe<'t wide, and 60 feet 
from floor to ceiling, — a pleasing building on the exterior, 
with a very tasteful front ; the interior is highly ornamentotl ; 
it cost §130,000. In the fall of 1882, the noted political 
campaign took place in which Honorable John T. C'aine, 
of the People's Party, and Judge P. T. Van Zile, of the 
Lil)cral Party, made a tour of nearly the whole Territory, 
delivering stumj) speeches. In June of this year. Liberty 
Park, previously known as Locust Grove, having been 
purchased by the City Corjioration, was formally o])ened 
to the public; the Park contains 120 acres, and is being 
rapidlv imjirovt^l. March, 188."}, saw the Denver and Rio 
(rrandc Railway complete<l between Salt Lake and Denver; 
giving a new field for our enterprising merchants, and 
()])ening another avenue for a business, of which this ])lacc 
gets the larger share. In 1885, the Democrat was issued, 
and the Democracy ran a party ticket for the Territorial 
election in the fall of the same year. The Union National 
Bank, the outgroMi:h of the banking house of Walker 
Brothers, was organized ; it has the largest safe deposit 
vaults between Chicago and San Francisco. 

Salt Lake City lies in the northeastern corner of a 
splendid valley — a valley bounded on the east by the 
Wasatch Range, perhaps the most striking and magnificent in 
the whole Rocky Mountain chain ; and on the west, partially 
by the Oquirrh Range, which terminates on the north by 
fringing the American Dead Sea, and runs but a limited 
distance south. From the northern extremity of the 
Oquirrh Range, Great Salt Lake forms the boundary line 
until connection is made with another valley still farther 
north, for the Rocky chain is a succession of grand moun- 
tains, gorgeous canyons and fair and lovely valleys. The 
city rests almost on the ba.se of the Wasatch Range — rather 
on a gentle slope from it, leaning to the south and south- 
west. Thus, it enjoys a most desirable exposure in the 
directions mentioned, and is also protected from harsh 
northern and eastern winds by the grand and towering 
background which the Wasatch Range forms. Fringing 
the western limit of the city, and winding its measured 
way through a large portion of the valley — like a silver 
thread as seen from some o'erviewing eminence, until it is 
lost in the Great I^ake, is the Jordan River, a stream 
that gives beauty and wealth to many parts of the valley 
through irrigation channels. The city is fed with water 
from numerous mountain streams, clear and ])ure. These 
are divided ag-ain and again. Running through the city 
in every direction, conjoining everywhere, and again separ- 
ating, forming an infinitude of small water ways along 
either side of all streets, so that one never loses sight of 
them, they give an air of freshness, of sweetness and of 
purity that lends to the surroundings a charm captivating 
and irresistible. These are useful for irrigation, they are 
ornamental for giving life to the trees planted at regular 



distances along their courses, which afford a grateful .shade 
in Summer by their dense foliage, and enrich the air with 
their perfumes. These streams carry health, wealth and 
perennial delight to citizen and visitf)r in their cf)nstant 
flow. Irrigation in the city is jnaterially aided by means 
of a canal some twenty-one miles long, which taj)s Utah 
Lake, a fresh water re.servoir in a valley to the south, and 
brings a large body of water to the city at a time when it 
is of very great value. The Sununer rains are uncertain; 
they cannot be relied upon for the fostering of agriculture, 
a difficulty common to all higher altitudes, but which 
nature has made a blessing here by the vast accumulation of 
snow in the mountain fastnc^sses that render irrigation jios- 
.sible, and give an assurance of returns to the farmer which 
is not enjoyed even in countries where the rainfall is most 
trustworthy. All that fills the eye with gladness, all that 
has ble.s.sed honest toil in this now beautiful and bountifid 
land, all that has made homes, waving fields, thriving 
orchards, growing cities, all that gives to the heart tliat 
pure sense of happy cast, the consciousness of ineffable charms 
produced by untiring toil — all that in this country attracts 
the stranger, and he who would find acpiiet and prosjierous 
home in this region — all, all is due to the .■^la.sm's snows, 
to the mountain fiistnes.ses where it lies bedded till a Sum- 
mer s sun gradually dis.solves it, till it finds its way to 
mountain streams which, pouring into the valleys, are led 
by a thousand arteries (the result of honest toil) over the 
thirsty land, till they bless and gladden it as they do the 
eyes and the hearts of all who behold its results. Coupled 
with human exertion and the intellect and skill of man, it 
is the savior, the maker of all that is best in this goodly 
land. The site of Salt Lake City is one of great natural 
beauty, growing and building in a valley of unsurpa.ssed 
productiveness. The soil, containing an abundance of the 
most precious elements of fertility, is rich and deep and 
rests on a substratum of clay. Surrounding all are the 
eternal mountains, lifting their linge heads into the azure 
bosom, their summits crowned even in midsummer, with 
snows as eternal as themselves. Seen in the Fall of the 
year, when the rugged mountain steeps are pur})le, yellow 
and crimson, when they burn with the scarlet of frostbitten 
leaves and vegetation nippwl by the early frosts, when up 
from the midst of embowering trees rises the smoke of 
quiet and peaceful settlements that follow the mountain 
contour, when the green of meadow and the rich golden 
hue of ripening harvests, like a mantle of gold and silver, 
shinuner beneath the rays of an unclouded sky, then indeed 
come thoughts or memories of the splendors of Alpine 
regions, compared with which even these scenes do not 
])alc nor fear comparison. The city stretches along the 
sloping plateau for a distance of about three miles east and 
west and two miles nortii and south. The southern and west- 
ern part.s — and they arr tii(! larger — are laid off into blocks 
of ten acres each, with streets 1.32 fwt wide, rumn'ng at 
right angles. The north-ea.stern part is divided into blocks 
of five acres each, with .streets eighty feet wide. Encircling 
the business portion of the town are the residences 



of citizens, surrounded by gardens, embowered in orchards 
and magnificent shade trees, and traversed by the living 
streams of wat«r which render the atmosphere pure, one is 
led to view the Home of the Saints as the Garden of the 
Gods. Each street presents the appearance of a long ave- 
nue of poplar, locust, box elder, catalpa and other orna- 
mental shade trees, often hiding with their foliage the 
outlines of some cottage, or the more pretentious 
and imposing architecture of a mansion. The ac- 
companying views of Salt Lake City give an idea 
of its general appearance. On the ea.st, at the foot of 
the Wa.satch Mountains, lies Fort Douglas, two miles from 
the city, one of the most solidly constructed and well kept 
and beautiful forts of the Union. On the west are the 
depots of the Utah Central, Utah and Nevatla, and Den- 
ver and Rio Grande Railroads. On the north are City 
Creek and the far famed Hot and Warm Sulphur Springs. 
The Great Salt Lake is visible from the city, and across it 
are frequently seen the most remarkable sunsets, unrivalled 
in any part of the world. Though showing well the 
extent and general character of the tt)wn, they do but faint 
justice, as far as the business blocks and residences are 
concerned. The various causes that have combined to 
render this a place of commercial importance, are the facts 
tliat it is a trade centre, the metropolis of the Rocky 
Mountain region, that it is fed by the great trans-conti- 
nental roads — the Union Pacific, Central Pacific, Denver 
and Rio Grande Railroads and their connections; its LTni- 
versity. Seminaries and High Schools, its Hospitals, 
Smelters, and the surrounding country with its never fail- 
ing agricultural products. There is no genera! market, 
but in its place can be found, at a convenient distance from 
almost any point, a bountiful supply of the products of 
the Territory, and of other regions, and at prices so fair 
that strike the new comer with amazement. Salt Lake 
merchants are heavy exporters of cereals, tubers and 
other protlucts to the eastern and western States, and even 
as far as the British Isles. Clean Utah wheat and barley 
hold first -rank in the Chicago market, and Utah potatoes 
have no equal for size, quality and flavor combined. 
Within thirty-six miles, on the east side, lies Park 
City with its famous Ontario, Daly, Crescent, and other 
extensive silver mines. The wonderful Ontario, is without 
an equal on the globe. Its officers are : L. T. Haggin, 
president; Wm. Willis, vice-president; and J. B. Haggin, 
treasurer, all of San Francisco; R. C. Chambers, superin- 
tendent. Salt Lake City. The mine was located in 1872, 
the present company having been organized in 1876. In 
round figures the cost of the building, foundations and 
Cornish pump, amount to $500,000; the value of improve- 
ments, with tunnels, $2,675,000; output to March, 
1887, $18,000,000; amount of dividends paid to March, 
1887, 130 in number, $8,050,000. On the west, are 
the lead and silver mines at Bingham, Tintic and 
Stockton, some of the Bingham mines having turned 
out as much as a hundred and fifty thousand tons 
of ore. On the south, are the Cottonwood mines 



within a few miles, and the Horn Silver and other mines 
at Frisco and Silver Reef. Sandy, twelve miles south, is 
the Swansea of Utah, where are located several smelting 
and refining works, to which arc brought the ores from the 
mines in Utah, Idaho and Nevada. Utah now ranks third 
of the large precious metal prwlucing States and Territories 
of the Union. Wells, Fargo & Company's statement of 
the mineral product of Utah, for the year 1886, places the 
mint valuation at $10,365,044.67. Perhaps the most im- 
jwrtant — though by no means the most accessible or desir- 
able — iron ore deposits are in Iron County, which, when 
reached by railroad — now only a few miles distiint^ — will 
certainly develop a Pittsburg in the western part of the 
continent. Professor Newberry says of these vast iron 
fielcLs : — "The deposits of iron ore near Iron City and Iron 
Springs, in southwestern Utah, are probably not excelled, 
in intrinsic value, by any in the world. The ore is mag- 
netite and hematite, and occurs in a belt fifteen or tw^enty 
miles long and three or four miles wide, along which there 
are frecpient out-crops, each of which shows a length and 
breadth of several hundred feet of compact, massive ore, 
of the richest quality. There are certainly no other such 
deposits of iron ore west of the Mississippi, and, should it 
be foimd practicable to use Utah coal for the manufacture 
of pig and bar iron and steel from these ore beds, it would 
be difficult to overestimate the influence they would have 
on the industries of the Pacific Coast." In Juab County, 
developments in iron deposits exhibit the most gratifv'ing 
and astonishing results, while Tintic has for years ftirnished 
large quantities of iron ore. A company is now organized 
for the operation of these mines, and so far the results are 
most gratifying. In an insignificant blast, with crude 
facilities, 65 per cent, of iron was retluced from the ore. 
It seems only a question of time when from these mines 
will be supplied largely the fiirnaces at Pueblo, Colorado. 
Besides these are large iron resources in Weber County, 
which are now being investigated with a view to their 
utilization. In fact, the iron resources are absolutely 
boundless. The coal fields of L^tah are remark- 
able for their vastness. The main supply, of the 
Salt Lake market, is furnishe<^l from the Valley of the 
Weber, although the Pleasant Valley and Sanpete beds are 
formidable competitors. In Pleasant Valley, the deposits 
are of that magnitude that the railroad cars are backed 
into the mines and there loaded with an excellent bitumin- 
ous coal. The coal fields of this Territory, in conjunction 
with the Union Pacific mines in Wyoming, on the eastern 
border of Utah, su])iily Montana, Nevada, Idaho, Wyom- 
ing, Colorado and Nebraska, and yet the development of 
the coal resources are at present only in their incijiieney. 
In the year 1886, the Pleasant Valley coal bwls sujiplied 
72,000 tons of coal ; the Weber Valley mines, 46,200 tons ; 
and the Union Pacific mines, 7^8,986 tons. It is claimed, 
that with projior ovens, a fiiirly good coke can be made 
from the Pleasant Valley and Sanpete coals. Within easy 
reach by railroad, are also rich and immense deposits of 
antimony, sulphurs, salts, eopjjer, sandstone, limestone, 




CULMER'S RESIDENCES. 




CALDER'S MUSIC PALACE. 



-ESTA B US HE O 1870 !=^ 



MKIf^iK^ 



SALT LAKE HERALD, 



4i^ 



THE PE0P[2E'S PAPER 

DAILY, ^■''(UJ)'^' WEEKLY AND 

SUNDAY, ff^'cG" SEMI-WEEKLY. 

THE HERALD CO, (Incorporated), Props. 



Siiliscriptidii Prices, )iayal>le in Advance: 
Da77v, $ro.- Siuiday, $2; Semi- IFeMy, $j.- ]\Wkh. $2 



Address all t'onimunieations Direct to 



THE HERALD CO., 
Salt Lake City, Utah. 



•:-.-QrIENTAL 3^^f^NA RdGf 

A Novel, Elegant and Useful Pastime for Ladles. 




Smyrna Boxes, 

iint.iining Specimen nf Work 

Mnterials for Tri:il Strip 

:in(l Instructions. 



URIENTAL (SMYRNAi WOOL, 
SMYRNA COTTON, 

SMY NA DESIGN BOOKS, 
SMYRNA DESIGNS, 

COLOR CARDS 

SMYRNA STAFFS, 

SMYRNA KNITTING PINS . 
Ktr. 



1 he nbove Gootij .ire obtain:ilile from 

MRS. I. McEWAN, Sole Agent for Utah, 

63 W. Fii-.st South Slreet, - Salt Lake City, Utah. 

p. O Box Ssi I Orders Ijv Mail I'romptly Attended to. 



'Successor to Eli B. Kklsey)- 



Heal S Mm\mkm S amd S L©an S A. 

OFFICE: No. 25 and 27 E. First South Street, 



Four Doors East of Deseret National Bank. 



A General Real Estate Business Transacted strictly on 
a Commission Basis. 



COLLECTIOISI DEPARTMENT. 

Nouses Re7itcd, Rents Collected, Money Loaned on Approved Real Estate 
Security, and the Collection of Interest a Specialty. 




—DEALER IN— 

GroeericA, ProVii^ioni^, pcgctablci^, loultrij, Kidh 6^ CJame. 

Goods Delivered Promptly. Lunches for Tourists and Parties to the Lake a Specialty. 
rri«p/.o... 5^. 52 E. FIRST S H ST., SALT LAKE CITY. 




M. D. FOLEY. 

• H. JOHNSON. 

W. H. REMINGTON. 



MUD CREEK MINE 



•jK* iSirCESSORS TO IVALKEH BROS.. 



p. O. Box 245. 



18 and 20 West, Second South Street, 

S^^LT L.i^iCE] CITY, TJT.A.H:. 



AGENTS FOR UTAH FOR: Safety Nitro Powder Co., Utah Powder Co., J. W. Dimmit & Co., D. 
S Erb & Co., El Modelo Cigar Co., Julius Ellinger & Co., Allen & Ginter, The J. B. Pace Tobacco Co., 
Colorado Soap Co., and Proprietors of the La Reina Vuelta Cigar Factory in Key West. 

We are the ONLY EXCLUSIVELY WHOLESALE GROCERY HOUSE in Salt Lake City. Carry 
one of the Largest Stocks of Staple and Fancy Groceries in the West, and supply the Trade in Arizona, Colorado, 
Nevada, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and Oregon. 

New Fire Proof Brick Warehouse, 60x100 feet, immediately in rear of Stores. 



ESTABLISHED 



3eEDSMAN and pLORlST. 



CORNER SECOND EAST 



SECOND SOUTH STREETS. 




CORNER SECOND EAST 

AND 

SECOND SOUTH STREETS. 



>^<Kut ytotticr ^ork a Spetsnita '^ 



Weddintrs, Parties, Receptions, Funeruls, etf., Finnisliod 
with Floral Decorations and Designs on Short Notice. I'aiticnlar 
Attention Paid to Shipping t'nt Flowers and Designs to Distant 
I'oints. A Fine and Complete .Assortment of Greenhouse and 
Bedding Plants, especially adapted to this climate. 



Xj.A.3SrnDSC-A.I=E G-J^K-lDEI^rilsrG. 



CvmIc't^ 1 SaE^T I!xAKB. CfTY. 



Eenpv F. Glapl^, 



29 E. First 



South Street. 



\t, '^ 



THE TAILOR 



SALT LAKE 




CITY. UTAH. 



Valley-Tan Remedies. 

L. UTAH'S FAVORITE FAMILY MEDICINES' 
^ SOLD AT ALL STORES. '^ 



ESSENcf s^VtS^- 
, OF LIFE L CO'*'' * 



AGENTS 

WANTED. 



(^yQ^^u^y^r^' 



SALT LAKE 
CITY, UTAH. 




PARLOR FURNITURE, SECOND FLOOR. 



CHAMBER FURfJiTURE, SECOND FLOOR. 




WALL PAPER AND CARPETS, FIRST FLOOR 



H. DINWOODEV. 



FURNITURE, FIRST FLOOR. 




I ii %\ 



^' ;^" '.^ '>l^ 
* m* 'ftS> '^w.- m '^. n*-^^'! 'ii 







RtSiDENCE OF J. T. GILMER 




,^MI>>-<X ^ifM^ 



m^^'^m ^ 






FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 




ALL HALLOW 



marble, slate, brick clavri, jxittcrs' clays and fircstone. 
T!io luscious fruits, the plump gmin, with the sheep and 
stock industries, form some of our principal sonrct'-s of 
wealth, the importance of which can no more be measural 
than a few years ago it could be i)re<lictc<l. There is here 
a foundation of prosperity and grentness which will grow 
as the population and years increase. The climate and soil 
are singularly adapted to fruit growing, trees being vigor- 
t)us grower;* and generous bearers, while small fruits do 
remarkably well. The following table will give an approx- 
imate idea of the yield : 

• Barley avei-ages 32 bushels to the acre. 

Corn' " 27 

Oat« " 36 " " 

Wheat " 28 " " 

Pears " 75 " 

Peaches " 120 " " 

Plums " 165 " " 

Apricots " 145 " " 

Cherrie.s " 75 " " 

Grdj>es " G260 pounds " 

Tliis rcinarkal)le city, having a ])opulation of nearly 
thirty-five thous;ui(i, has many fine residencies, set back in 
siiiootii lawns, fringed ijy parterres of flowers, shaded by 
umbrageous foliage and bearing about them the marks and 
indications of wealthy owners. Street-car lines diverge 
from Main .Street through the t(jwn to all jioints of the 
i'onij)ass. The immense quantity of sha<le and fruit trees 
growing in the city, give it, in the Spring, the ajipearancc 
of a flower garden — the trees being then all in blossom, 
the pure, sparkling water flowing down the streets iu rich 
ai)undan(re, a sight is formed that cannot be surpassetl 
anywhere. The wide, level streets, lined on each side 
with rows of shade trees, form elegant drives in this 
city of magnificent ilistances, and t(jwards evening of 
any fine day the streets are crowded with the fine 
turnouts. The Utah Driving Park Association, in 
their Spring and Fall ra<!es, attract the best blooded 
stock from Montana, California and Colorado. As good 
steppers can be found on our streets as anywiiere in the 
I'nion. Tlu! Summers are warm and dry, the Winters 
generally mild and open^ The average fall of snow is 
light in the valleys and heavy in the mountains. "The 
climate is agreeable and siilubrious, the air dry, elastic, 
transparent and bracing, and, on the whole, is not unlike 
tiiat of northwestern Texas and New Mexico, and is iigree- 
able except for a month or so in Winter; and then the 
tennx^niture seldom falls to zero, or snow to a greater depth 
than a foot, and it soon melts away, although it sometimes 
affords a few days' shnghing. The Spring opens in March, 
tlie atmosphere becomes clear as a dew-<lroj), deciduous 
trees burst intx) leafy bloom, and the green of the valleys 
jjursues the retiring snow-line up the mountain slopes. 
The Summer is pleasant in its onset, accompaniinl by fra- 
grant airs and full streams. Springs of sweet water, fed 
largely from the surface, bubble forth everywhere. But, 



as the sea.son advances the heat increases, the winds become 
la<len with dust, the storms are mainly dry, the spr":igs 
fail or become brackish from concentration of their mineral 
salts, the streams run low, and vegetation parches mdcss 
artificially watered. Still, from tlie rai)id nuliation at the 
earth's surface, the nights are agreeably cool and give 
strength to bear the heat of the days. In Octolx-r, the air 
clears up ag-ain as in Spring, and the landscape softens with 
the rich colors of the dying vegetation, which reaches up 
the mountain sides to their summits in jilaccs, but on them 
the gorgeous picture is soon overlaid by the first snows of 
approaching winter. The Fall is delightful and generally 
lingers to the end of the year." The mean Summer tem- 
perature is about seventy-four degrees at two o'clock, p. m., 
and in the evening but fifty-seven d(>grees. Those who have 
to swelter through many nights in a season, with the ther- 
mometer between eighty and ninety degrees, would appre- 
ciate this tlifference. The mean temperature, in Winter, is 
about thirty degrees, the denizens of Saltl^ake often enjoy- 
ing a warm sun while reading of the biting cold and pierc- 
ing blizzards of a lower altitude. Plowing is frequently 
done during the Winter months of Dwember and February. 
Salt liake City is well supj)lietl with hotels — large, roomy, 
furnished with the latest imjiroved elevators, electric lights 
and bells, fine billiard halls, and a table at which nothing 
in the way of eatables is lacking. The prices have a nuige 
that suit the circumstances of every person. There are 
published in Salt Lake City : the Deneret News, (daily, 
semi-weekly and weekly) ; the Herald, (daily, semi-weekly 
and weekly) ; the Tnfnine, (daily and weekly) ; the Demo- 
crat, (daily and weekly) ; the Bikuben and the Srcmka 
Harolden, (weekly) ; the Juvaiik Instructor and the 
Woman's Exponent, (semi-monthly) ; the Contributor, Rocky 
3Iountain Christian Advocate, Parry's Literary Ma(jazinc, 
Z. C. M. I. Advocate, the Historical Becord and the Crocer, 
(all monthly). The Frat«'rnal and Benevolent S(K-ieties arc 
well represented, comi)rising lodges of the Masonic Order, 
Odd l*\'llows, Knights of Pythias, Ancient Order Unitc<l 
Workmen, Tcm])lc of Honor, Foresters, Brotherhoods of 
Locomotive Engineers and L(K'oniotive Fiivmen, and 
Grand Army of the Rej)ublic, the first nientionetl having 
a magnificent library, with the Odd Fellows following 
close in its wake. The water supply is furnished by a 
stream flowing from City Creek Canyon, and by one from 
Emigration Canyon, also by several flowing artesian wells 
in the southern and western jiarts. Tin; AVater M'orks arc 
of the gravity system — settling and filtering tanks or reser- 
voirs, for the main part of the city, being placet! half a 
mile up the City Creek Canyon, in the natin-al b«l of the 
stream, the height of the hnsition of the tanks giving an 
average pressure of seventy ])ounds t;) the inch. The 
theoretical discharge is 1,5()() gallons per minute. Other 
tanks or reservoii-s are placed further Uj) the creek, su|)ply- 
ing the elevat<'d jiortions of the city on the north IxmicIi ; 
all being finl by the natural flow of the mountain stre;mi, 
and thus rendering the lifting pnxxiss unnecessary. The 
Water Works System is owned by the City Corporation, 



and comprises sixteen and a quarter miles of mains with 
one hundred and fifty-one fire hydrants. The Fire Depart- 
ment consists of a chief enjrineer, two assistant engineers, 
secretary, six foremen of companies, four engine companies, 
hook and latlder company, and two independent companies, 
with a membership of 145. The Department has 4,000 
feet of hose. Salt Lake City has been peculiarly fortunate 
in the absence of destructive fires and the Department ha.s 
had but little to do compared with other cities of equal 
importance. The large size of tiie blocks, and the wide 
streets, render a sweeping conflagration almost an impossi- 
bility. The insurance rates are low, owing to immunity 
from extensive fires. The annual rate of taxation, is: 
Municipal tax, five mills; County, six mills; Territorial, 
three mills ; Special School tax, three mills ; making a total 
of twelve mills on the dollar. The bonded debt of the 
city is so trifling, that it is hardly worth mentioning. 
Main Street and First and Second South Streets are lighted 
by electricity, both by the Brush and incandescent lights. 
The Gras Works, in which the City Corporation owns a 
large interest, has several miles of main pipes laid, which 
are being steadily extended. The business portion of 
the city is covered with a net work of telephone lines, 
M'hile telegraphic communication is had with all parts of 
the Territory and the world. The most prominent building 
in the city is the Temple, which is one hundred and eighty- 
six feet and six inches long, and ninety-nine feet in width. 
It was commenced April 6, 1853, the foundation is sixteen 
feet in thickness, and the walls, up to the square, nine feet 
nine inches; there will be three toM'ers at each end of the 
the building, the centre ones rising to a hight of two hun- 
dred feet, and its total cost wlien completed is estimated at 
$10, 000,000. It is constructed of speckled granite rock, 
brought from the mouth of Little Cottonwood Canyon, 
some twenty miles south-east of the city, and wiien com- 
pleted promises to be one of the most magnificent build- 
ings in the country. The large Tabernacle on the same 
block and to the west of the Temple, is elliptical in shape, 
two hundrctl and fifty feet long, one hundred and fifty feet 
wide and seventy feet in iieight from tiie floor to the ceil- 
ing. The interior of tiie building presents the appearance 
of an oval arch without any centre support, being the larg- 
est self-supporting arch in America, with tlie exception of 
that of the Central Depot of New York. The building 
ha.s a seating t^pacity of 10,000 persons. It has twenty 
doors nine feet wide. It contains a grand organ, one of 
the largest and l)est tonal in the world. The Salt Lake 
Assembly Hall is of Gothic architecture, and is one hun- 
dred and twenty feet long, sixty-eight feet wide, and is 
jne hundred and thirty feet to top of tower rising from 
centre of building. This hall will accommodate 3,000 
people. In this building is another fine organ, which like 
that in the Tabernacle, was built entirely by Utah artizaus. 
The Council House, forty-five feet square and two stories 
high, was one of the most substantial and ])retentious 
public buildings erected during the ejirly days of the Ter- 
ritory. Here the first Legislative Assemblies convened, 



and it ha.s been used for many important purposes since 
then. Some three years ago the building was nearly de- 
stroyed by fire, nothing but the bare walls now remain. 
The De«eret News ofiice and tithing stores were until recently 
church buildings. In the former are printed the 
church papers and books; in the latter is received and paid 
out the tithes and donations of the Mormons. On the 
same Ijlock is the Lion House, the Beehive House and the 
Eagle Grate, all old landmarks of LTtah, and in close prox- 
imity is the Gardo House, the residence of the President 
of the Church. The City Hall, a red sandstone building 
of two stories high, which wa.s erected at a cost of $70,- 
000, contains the offices of the Municipal Governiflent. 
The Territorial Legislative Assembly holds its sessions in 
this building. The Deseret University building, the 
Catholic Hospital, St. Mary's School, Hammond Hall, 
All Hallows College, are all imposing edifices, attractive in 
design and built to stay. The County Court House, in 
the southwesaern part of the city, is a two story adobe 
structure, containing the County Offices, the ba.sement be- 
ing used as a County Jail. Plans are now making for a 
new County Jail which is to be constructed on the most ap- 
proved methods. The Federal Court holds its sessions in 
the Wasatch Block, originally designed as a hotel. The 
Theatre and the Opera House are both fine large struct^ 
ures with ample stage room and appurtenances to accom- 
modate even the largest theatrical companies that cross the 
continent. Salt Lake is recognized as a good show town, 
all the large and best com])anies make it a point to stop 
here. Lately the Opera House has not been used for 
theatrical purposes. The IMuseum Ijuildiug, though delap- 
idated, contains an attractive and rare collection of curios- 
ities and unique specimens, collected from every part of the 
world, and Utah in particular. The Indian relics form a 
prominent feature.^ Its cabinets are well filled, for it re- 
ceives material aid from Mormon missionaries wlio gather 
curiosities for it when traveling abroad. Much can there 
be found relating to the history of this Territory from its 
fii-st settlement to the present time. Zion's Co-operative 
Mercantile Institution building, the Jennings' Block, 
Walker House, Deseret National Bank building, the D. 
O. Calder and Dinwoodey Blocks, the Hooper & 
Eldredge Block, Palace Hotel, Cullen's New Hotel, 
White House, Union Block, Wasatt^h Building, Masonic 
Hall, Clift House, St. James Hotel, Hill & Symons 
Block, Denhalter Block, Commerce Blcwk and Ryman 
Block, Ellerbeck and Madsen Blocks, Metropolitan Hotel, 
Walker Bros. Block, Auerbacii Bkick, Keyser's Building, 
Herald Building, and G. M. Scott & Co.'s Warehouse, 
all give evidence of the confidence our moneyed men have 
in the stability of the city and its gro.wth. Fort Douglas, 
located two miles east* of the t<)\vu,'is one" of the most 
ta.stefully laid-out anil cleanly-kept military posts in the 
Union. The officer's quarters and barracks are all built 
witii rock and brick. Tiic Sun<lay conc-erts by the Fort 
band during the Summer months are a source of attraction 
to the citizens, and the lovely drive is very generally 




CONTINENTAL HOTEL AND HERALD BLOCK. 




.VALKER HOUSE HOTEL. G. S. ERB, Prop. 




METROPOLITAN HOTEL, G. S. ERB, Prop. 



]\/[OIINTAIN M GO. 



JOHN HEIL, JR., Manager, 



Wholesale and Retail Dealers In :;:- 



r(B li; I 



^^^ 



OFFICE AND SUPPLY DEPOT: 



56 and 58 E. Second South Street, 

Salt L-ake City, Utah. 



ICE HOUSES 



(5) 



At Park Lake, Red Butte, Fish Creek, D. & R. G. 
and Foot of Fourth West St., Salt Lake Citv. 



Spencer & Kimball, 

f i 

Only EXCLUSIVE Dealers in 

Boots i^ Sltoi^s 

NO. \m S. M.VIN STIIEET. 

Salt Lake City, - Utah. 



SEND FOK OUR 

$3.00. 



$3.00 



IBS $3.00 



$3.00. 



JAMES TUCKER. 



H. W. SELLS. 



^^^Jl^" 



Wholesale and Retail Dealers in 



T. & G. FLOORING, 
RUSTIG SIDING, LATH. 






WINDOWS, DOORS & 



LUMBER SAWED AND DRESSED TO ORDER. 



150 and 152 W. First South Street, opp, 14tli Ward Assembly Rooms, 



I'. O. Hox 107S. 
Telephone ,513. 



-S7ILT liTI^E CITY. 



Hafflliiri-Iasileliiirs Fire lis. Co. 

OF HAMBURG, GERMANY. 



The Risks insured hy tliis Company are assumed by co- 
operation with the Maodkbukg Firk Insurance Co.,MAaDBBURa 
Re-Insurance Co., Maodehuku General Insurance Co., ag- 
gregating the amount of more tliau 

64,000,000 MARK OR $16,000,000.00. 



-LOSSES PAID AS SOON AS ADJUSTED- 



S. W. DARKE & CO.. Afft.s., 

ijj Salt Lake City. 



— A/^2>eai€r and Jobber inwrw^ 

Foreign & Domestic Fruits, Nuts, Fish, 

ETC., ETC., 
BASEMENT NO 55 S. MAIN STREET, SALT LAKE CITY. 



To AUIBMKY, 

■. ■ DEALER IN . '. 

Groceries and Provisions, 

S-OREIGM. AND DOMESTIC FRUtTS, 



lE^O-^ <5Z. CO., 

***************************************** 
• Commission Mercliants ni Wtiolesale Proflnce Dealers ♦ 

78 W. FIRST SOUTH ST., SALT LAKE CITY. 



BUTTER, EGGS, POULTRY, FISH 
AND GAME. 



FINE TEAS, COFFEES AND 
SPICES. 



Snow's Union Block. 73 E. Second South Street, 

AND 

RESTAURANT, 62 E. First South Street, 

SALT LAKE GITY. 



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d. K. GlkLESIflE, 

Real Sstate d^ Loan Agexxt 

240 S. Main Street, Next to Walker House, 



SALT LAKE CITY. 



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CEMETERY 



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tr, r^ ISOUTH^V . 



Woolley, Young &HardyCo. 

Have a Large and Varied Stock of 

Xj XJ \U O ^^ ' 

events' 3^urntshin9 Oioofis, 

Boots^ Shoes and Slippers. 

IN OUR GROCERY DEPARTMENT 

We have the Largest Stock of 

Staple & Fancy Groceries, 

Try our Mocha and Java Coffee, the Best in Town. 



Old Coustitutiou Building, Main St. 





^ 



gALlT I^AKE {^mm. 



Wholesale and Retail Dealers in 



UMBER, 



•5 




Flooring'. Ceiling-, Door-s, AViii<l«>\V!>, Traiisoius, 
Blinds, East !>ako D«ors aiitl Caseiugs. Enamel, 
Catlie<lral and Window (ilass, Mixed Paints, Putty, 
Nails. 



A Full Stock uf Tnickee and Oregon Common and 
Finishing Lumber constantly on hand. 



REDWOOD SURFACED. REDWOOD CEDAR, TRUCKEE AND 
NATIVE SHINGLES, BALUSTERS & HAND RAIL. 



Made. to Order. Odd Size tFindowa Made on Short Xotice. 



'fill IP 

111 111"' f 

WHOLEslEI'RETAIL.t 



^M 




UNION BLOCK. 




RESIDENCE OF S. F. FENTON. 






FIFTEENTH WARD ASSEMBLY 


HALL. 




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RESIDENCE OF REV. G. D. B. MILLER. 



SOCIAL HALL. 



patronized. But above all, the Great Salt Lake is the at- 
traction for tourists. Its length is about eifjhty-five miles, 
by filty miles wide, with an average depth of twenty feet, 
and is reported tt) nowhere exceed sixty feet. The 
islands in the Lake are nine in number — one of them 
being twelve miles, another sixteen miles in length. The 
water of the Lake is so salty that it forms one of the 
purest and aiost concentrated brines known in the world. 
It compares, with other bodies of salt water, about as 
follows : 

WATF.I!. SOLinS. 

Atlantic Ocean iHj.5 3.5 

Metliterranean it().2 3.8 

Dead Sea 7(). 24. 

Great Salt Lake .S(j. 14. 

And in specific gravity, distilled water being unity : — 

Ocean Water 1.026 

Dead Sea 1.1 1(5 

Great Salt Lake 1.107 

It is.easily approached, by a sliort ride on the Utah & 
Nevada Railway, or in a lialf hour by the Denver & Rio 
Grande Railway. The exhilarating effects of a bath in its 

1 waters are fully appreciated and enjoyed by the residents, 
a.s much so as by the tourists; 48,27!t people were conveyed, 
in the Summer of 1886, by the Utah & Nevada Railway 
and 53,347 by the Denver & Rio G rande Railway. The fare, 
for the round trip, is but fifty cents; and the accommoda- 
tions for excursionists, at botii places, are remarkable for 
this inland Territory. On public holidays, the attractions 
are sometimes as varied as those of Coney Island or Man- 
hattan Beach. Bath houses and fresh water baths are sup- 
plied for the use of bathers, and the surf is frequently as 
enlivening a.s that on the shores of the Atlantic or Pacific 
Oceans. ■ Although it is termed the Dead Sea of America 
the waves often make it appear quite "lively." Thd Lake 
has no outlet. The mountain streams, converging within 
a radius of nearly 200 miles, north and south, and forming 
rivers, all empty into this Lake. The mountain soil 
is deeply impregnated with salts and minerals, and the 
water mused by the melting snow, running through it be- 
comes laden with them in solution. These salts ai'c thus car- 
ried to the streams, thence into the rivers and by them int« the 
Lake, where they remain forever. The Lake does not evince 
any perceptible rise or fall, save following unusually severe 
Winters or exceedingly mild ones; and it is relieved from 
overflowing the accustomed bounds only l)y evaporation. By 
this process the salts remain in the Lake, and thus, year 
by year, though imperceptibly, the saline density of the 
Lake incrca.ses. The result is that the Lake is one of the 
. greatest and most inexhaustible salt producers in the world, 
and it is freely taken advantage of. Not only is salt made 
for local purposes, but it luis been largely ex])orted, 
especially to the North, where it is used in the mines a.s a 
lixivator. One experience is always sufficient to make 
bathers careful to keep the water out of their months and 

'. nostrils, Tor its strength is such aa to make strangulation 



an easy possibility. Its buoyancy is almost incredible. 
In .some j)laces it is imj)ossiblc to sink. On its waters 
ride the old (Jarfield, and the little .steamers — the Susie 
Riter and the Whirlwind. During the months of July, 
Aug\ist and Sej)tember, tlie water is enjoyably tepid. The 
fi)llowing is an analysis of the water of the Lake,, made 
by Doctor Smart, of the United States Army, in 1877. 
He found an imperial gallon to contain nearly twenty-four 
and a half ounces of saline matter, amounting to nearly 
fourteen per cent : — 

Common Salt 11 .735 

Carbonate of Lime .016 

Sulphate of Lime 073 

Epsom Salts 1.123 

Chloride of Magnesia 843 

Percentage of Solids 13.790 

Water 86.210 

100.000 
One hundred grains of the dry, solid matter, contained: — 

Common Salt 85.089 

Carbonate of Ijime 117 

Sulphate of Lime 531 

Epsom Salts 8.145 

Chloride of Magnesia 6.118 

loo.ooo 
Beck's Hot S]>rings baths have achieved a wide notoriety 
for their curative properties. Here are supplied ])ublic or 
private plunge baths, with hotel accommodations, for the 
requirements of invalids desiring to test the full prop- 
erties of these famous sulphur springs. The tem])erature 
of the water is 128°. They are distant about three miles 
north of the city, and are easily reached either by the rail- 
roads, or by excursion wagons which run hourly to the 
springs. The Warm Sulphur Springs, within easy reach 
by street cars, are worthy of note ; they are owned by 
the City Corporation anil are considered efficacious in the 
cure of rheumatic, skin and kindred diseases. The water is 
conveyed in ]ii])es to plunge and tub baths, which are freely 
patronized by Salt Lake residents as well as by all visitors. 
Altliougli liiere arc several mauufiicturing interests repre- 
sentetl in the (lity, it is apjiarent to those who look into the 
matter thoroughly that the one great drawback to the 
material and rajtid advancement of Salt Lake City is the 
want of manufactories. Millions of dollars are sent from 
here annually for articles that can be made as cheaply and 
better at home. Take, for instance, the one item of boots and 
.shoes, the (piantity imported, if made here, would support 
a large number of laborers, besides keej)ing the money 
in the connnunity, instead of sending it away to support 
commonwealths in a great degree foreign to us. There is ab- 
.solutely no excuse for not manufactui:ing them all here, as 
the experience (<f Zion's Co-operative Mercantile Institution 
in their shoe fiictory ha.s demonstrated. Hitles are ex- 
ported, (freight paid on the outward trip,) converted into 



Ilommmial jnsitranrc |0,'|«/* $(fM im^^mU 



^J^ OF CALIFORNIA. 

OFFICE: No. 439 California St., San Francisco 

SAPE oEPosiT Bu.LD,NG_ /"^^^ PREPARATORY SCHOOLS 



(INCORPORATED 1878.) 
L. K. HOI.DEN. Edwaki) Bknnkr, 

Principal. 



President. 




CAPITAL PAID IN FULL, - $200,000.00 

Assets, January I si, I Kfij, - - 44'\(>!i.og 

Loises Paid since Conipa7iy was organized, $1 ,§,s 1 ,S<fg.j^ i 



JOHN H. WISE, 

Presidcni 



CHA.1. A. T.ATON, 

Secrelary. 



It. GVf/f/JSON, 

Gen. Agt. and Adjustc 



S. W. DARKE & CO., A&t.s., 

i;5 Salt Lake City. 




EVANS & SPENCER, 

©Ar!i'r JL.AKE1 CfTY. 



GUiMS, AMMUNITION, REVOLVERS, FISHING 
TACKLE, BASE BALL GOODS, BICYCLES, TRI- 
CYCLES, VELOCIPEDES AND BICYCLE ACCES- 
SORIES. 

Tents in Stock and Made to Order. 

Guns, Tents and Bicycles for Rent. 



AGENTS FOR GRAND RAPIDS PORTABLE HOUSES, 

(Adopted by the Lak» Park Resort Co.) 

Agents for Caligrapk Writing Machine. 



IIWPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF FINE CUTLERY. 
General Repairing & Lock^mithing Done. 



r: 



IN SALT LAKE. 



HE ACADEMY i.s under the patronage of the New \Ve8t 

Education C'ommipsion. 
HAMMOND HALL, with grounds costing over thirty thou- 
sand dollars, beautifully located, unequalled in heating, liglit 
and ventilation. 

Tlie Academy has a well-selected Library, excellent Cabinets, 
valuable Physical .\pparatus and Charts; also a large and choice 
collection of Stuffed Birds. 

The Students of the Academy carry on a flourishing Heading 
Room. 

The Academy has a full corps of highly-educated and ex- 
perienced instructors. 

Courses ' of Academic study, three years ; classical and 
scientific, four years; English, three years. These courses are 
severe, and adapted to tlie needs of young men and women who 
are ambitious and well. In respect of health and mental energy, 
this institution invites comparison. 

A NEW DEPARTMENT of Manual Training shortly to be 
organized. Large additions are now being made to the resources 
of the Institution for this purpose. Announcements later. 

ED^^/'ARD BENNER. 

Principal. 



^LBRIDGE TUFT'S 

! 118 E. Third South St., 



kO^ 



#- 



Salt ITakc CItg. 




DLDGANTLY-FURNISHE^D ROOMS 

JKithcr Single or En Suite, ijK^ith or |^ithout goard, - 
AT MODERATE PRICES. 



A Fine artesian well on the premises i 




THIRD SOUTH STREET, FROM MAIN LOOKING EAST 




1 1 'I I ^!^| 




SALT LAKE CITY BREWERY. 



boots and shoes, and freight again paid on their inward 
trip; so also with the larger jxirtion of liarness used here. 
So, likewise, witli our clotliing and blankets. The 
Provo Woolen Mills and the Deserct Woolen Mills 
have proven the practicability of converting some grades of 
our home-raiseti wool into goods and material equal to, if not 
better than, any imported. The list of practicable necessi- 
ties which might be manufactured or supplied by our home 
markets, could cover nearly all the staple imports, viz : 
butter, candles, pickles, nails, crockery ware, cement, 
paints, white lead and lead pipe, and many other 
things, the material for the production of which is always 
with us. We call the attention of our capitalists to this 
important matter, as it will prove a material saving in 
time and expense, giving employment to quite a number 
of people and bringing a large sum of money into circula- 
tion. We have almost equally good water power as the New 
England States manufacturing districts, within a very few 
miles of this city ; a new market and one that grows steadily 
year by year. Salt Lake City, has, within it the Deseret 
University — the State school — governed by a C'hancellor 
and Board of Regents, first organized in 1850, and incor- 
porated by the Legislature, having but a nominal exist- 
ence until 1869. At that time, D. C). Calder, now deceased, 
having been placed in charge of the institution, its true 
value was demoustratetl, and subsequently Dr. J. R. Park 
has worked so energetically that it has taken a place in the 
front rank of our educational institutions. A normal class 
is sustained there by appropriation of the Legislature, to 
which each county is entitled to send a proportionate num- 
ber of students for tuition, free of charge, with the design 
of preparing competent teachers for the district or public 
schools throughout the Territory. There is a department 
of the Deseret University for deaf mutes — for the training 
of these unfortunates and teaching them the elementary 
branches of a common school education. There are in the 
city twenty-one public or District Schools. These are partly 
free, a portion of the tuition fee being paid by a Territorial 
school tax of three mills on the dollar, apportioned pro rata 
according to the school population in each district. The 
teachers are supplied principally from the normal class of 
the Deseret University. Utah, being a Territory, has no 
benefit of the revenue derivable from school lands. Mis- 
sion work by denominational churches- has been done, 
and the result is a general healthy showing, comparing 
favorably with many of the older Stiites, the percentage 
of illiteracy being the same as that of Ma.ssachusetts, accord- 
ing to the educational statistics given in the census of 1880. 
St. Mark's school was established in 1867, under the 
auspices of the Protestant Episcopal Church, by the Revs. 
George W. Foote and Thos. W. Haskins. It is organized 
on the plan of the public schools of the East, and has 
eleven grades with twelve teachers, furnishing the usual 
course of study of the common English branches, with 
mathematics, Latin and Greek, natural sciences, history and 
English literature in tlie high school department. Rowland 
Hall, a boardiug school for girls, WiVa opeue*,! iu 1S81, and 



grew out of a select parish school of St. Mark's Church, 
which was begun in, 1871. Its purpose is to furnish a 
pleasant home with superior educ<>ti(vnal advantages both 
in the studies of a tiionpugii academic course, and in music, 
painting and the modern languages. The Rev. G. D. B. 
Miller is the present head master of both schools, and the 
bishop of the diocese is respon.sible for their well-being. 
The Collegiate Institute, under the legis of the Presbyterian 
Church, was tbvuided by Prof. Coyner in 1875, now enrolling 
305 students, prepares boys for the best P^astern colleges, and 
gives girls the average Eastern seminary education. It is so 
crowded that a new building is being planned. Professor 
Millspaugh, the successful superintendent, is a graduate of 
the University of jNIicliigan and the Jefferson Medical Col- 
lege, Philadelphia. Hammond Hall (Salt Lake Academy), 
under tlie patronage of the Xew West Education Commis- 
sion, has cost, with the grounds surrounding, over S;>0,000; 
it was organized in 1873, incorporated in 1878, and has a 
full corps of higidy educated and experiencefl instructors. 
The acadeiuy has a well-selected library, excellent cabinets, 
and a flourishing reading room. The Commi.ssion has also 
other schools in different parts of the city ; in the Tenth 
Ward is found the one known as the Phillips School. These 
are free, and many parents avail themselves of free school- 
ing for their children ; they are supi>oi-tcd in great measure 
by the Congregational Churciies of the United States, and 
are under earnest Christian teachers. The Commission has 
been in existence for seven years, and now has twenty-two 
schools and academies in Utah. New comers will find 
them equal to Eastern ones. Salt Lake Seminary is an 
outgrowth of the Methodist Episcopal Church, estab- 
lished in 1870, and is now growing in popular favor. 
St. Mary's Academy is a Catholic institution, the fac- 
ulty of which is composed entirely of Sisters of the Holy 
Cross, and is looked upon as the most successful institu- 
tion of the kind in the West. St. Joseph's School for boys 
is operated by the same faculty. All Hallows College, 
the result of the labors of Reverend Father Scanlan, is 
under the supervision of Reverend Father Blake. The 
Swedish Ev. Lutheran Zion's Church, corner of Second 
South and Fourth Pjast Streets, was organized 1882 and the 
building erected in the Fall of 1885. Its dimensions are 
thirty-eight by sixty-six feet and will seat, when fully com- 
pleted, (500 people. Owing to the fact that a majority 
of the Scandinavian population formerly belonged to the 
Lutheran Church, its M'ork here is meeting with encourage- 
ment. Reverend J. A. Krantz is its present pastor. The 
x'hurch is also carrying on school work with tlie intention 
of having a Ciraded School at an early tlate. The 
Baptist School of Salt Lake was commenced in September, 
1883, and com])leted in the Spring of 1884. It was 
located on the Church grounds, and cost $1,760. It was 
totally destroyed, with its contents, on the night of 
January 5thj 1887, and will probably be rebuilt the 
])resent summer. The school is continued in tlie 
Lecture Room of the church edifice. The Latter- 
Day Saints have recently started a deuouiiuatioiial 



school, in tlio "Social Hall," which has gro\m remarka- 
bly in the short time of its existence, so much so, that 
another building — the one erected bv Brigham Young, in 
which his large family was formerly educated — has been 
engaged, and is also used by the committee having the 
school in charge. The institution is sufficiently provided 
with funds, by those interested, to insure its permanent 
financial success. A building is now nearing completion, 
in the Eighteenth Ward, which is to be used as a Mission 
or independent school, by the residents of that Ward. 
Among the important institutions of the citj' are the 
hospitals, the use of which is necessitated by the hazard- 
ous lives of the workers in the mines and smeltei^s. 
St. ^Mark's Hospital was organized in 1872, by the Eev. K. 
M. Kirby. It was begun in a small rented house; the 
number of patients treated the first year was 79, the num- 
ber treated in 1886 was 963. The present building is 
owned by the association and is entirely paid for. In 1879 
the association was incorporated, and since then has greatly 
increasetl its useftilness. Nearly 1,000 patients are treated 
every year, at an expense of 815,000. The money is 
collected from the miners in the Territory. On the pay- 
ment of one dollar a month, a miner is assured of medical 
care, board and lodging until cured, and a decent burial in 
the case of his death. In 1886, there were but three deaths 
in nearly a thousand patients. The Rev. C M. Armstrong 
is the present superintendent and treasurer. The Holy 
Cross Hospital was instituted and reared by the Catholics, 
at a cost of over .850,000. The Sisters have control 
of all its affairs. The Deseret Hospital, though not as i 
extensive as the foregoing, is doing good work. The j 
First Presbyterian Church, organized in 1871, has been i 
under the pastoral care of Dr. McNiece since 1877. 
Notwithstanding many removals, its membership is 
steadily increasing, and its Sunday School has over 220 I 
scholars. Since the recent extensive improvements, the ! 
church has an unusually attractive audience room. The ' 
Baptist Church was organized in August, 1883, and | 
dedicated in March, 1884. The building cost §13,000, [ 
including the land. Eev. h. L. Wood is the present I 
pastor, . assisted by two lady missionaries who conduct j 
two mission schools in the city. Mr. Wootl is also the ' 
editor and pro])rietor of the Baptid Mountaineer, a monthly I 
organ of the Baptist Church. St. Paul's Chapel was begun 
early in the year 1880, and the building was, consecrated 
;March 13th, 1881. Since then, services have been held 
regularly. In 1882 a parsonage was built, and the build- 
ing of a schoolhouse is in contemplation, in which th^ 
Sunday school will meet and a select school for boys and 
girls will be ojiened. The j)resent pastor is the Rev. C. 
M. Armstrong. The Jewish congregation, presided over 
by M. C. Phillips, has a neat yet commodious Synagogue, 
which is also used f(jr school jjurposes. The Deseret Wool- 
en Mills are located about four miles southeast of the citv, 
and, in 1886, they, manufactuied into flannels, yarns and 
linsey sheetings, o\er 200,000 pounds of wool. The Com- 
pany also runs a knitting factory, employing about- thirty 



machines in the manufacture of various woolen goods. 
The Company has money and determination to increase its 
facilities for manufacture as fast as the demands of the 
countiy require it. It has already acquired a flattering 
mercantile reputation. Messrs. Luke & Sherlock also 
operate twenty-two knitting machines, and William Pear- 
son eleven machines. The Utah Soap Manufacturing 
Company produced, in 1886, over 140,000 pounds of 
laundry and 100,000 pounds of toilet soaps, and have in- 
troduced the manufacture of sal soda, having a capacity of 
150 barrels per month. During the pa.st year, 150,000 
fire brick were turned out, and thirty tons of plaster of 
Paris made from gypsum from the quarries near 
Nephi. Elias jNIorris takes the lead in this specialty. 
There are three marble works doing a good business in 
monumental marble and granite work, the value of the 
labor alone amounting last year to §23,500. The Utah 
Cracker Factory report the business done by them last year 
as reaching §60,000. Paper boxes for the manufacturers 
of shoes, millinery, soap and jewelry were made to the value 
of §4,500. The product of the silk looms last year aggre- 
gated §4,000 — the silk being partly home raised. Of the 
breweries it may be stiid that last year the Salt Lake City 
Brewery sold 20,000 barrels of beer ; Margetts' Brewery, 
770 barrels of ale and beer; Fischer's Brewery, 7,500 bar- 
rels; Wagener's California Brewery, 9,150 barrels. In 
the foundry and machine shops, Davis, Howe & Co. 
turned out work aggregating §60,000 ; the Salt Lake City 
Foundry tt Manufacturing Company, §22,000 ; Silver Iron 
Works, over §10,000, and the Eagle Foundry §20,000. 
Zion's Co-operative Merc-antile Institution Shoe Factory 
employs 130 hands, and during past the year manufactured 
goods to the value of §148,093. Connected with this fac- 
tory is the manufactui-e of overalls — the business done 
aggregating §43,000. The same association also operates a 
tannery, the product of which was valued at §20,000. 
Summerhayes & Co. report the value of the product of 
their tannery at §45,000. The shoe facton,- of Solomon 
Bros. & Gold, turnetl out goods to the value of §60,000. 
Sam Levy mauufacturetl 350,000 hand-made cigars. Salt 
Lake Vinegar Company 50,000 gallons of vinegar. There 
was collected on the Great Salt Lake last Summer, 100,000 
tons of salt, a large portion of which was used in the 
smelters and mills. The Marion Manufacturing Company 
has started the manufacture of stamj>ed goods in tin, copper 
and ironware, and arrangements arc said to have been made 
to make tools, screw-dies, taps, etc. The Salt Lake Glass 
Works, though started only a year ago, runs four pots and 
nine annealing furnaces constantly in the maufacture of 
bottles and fruit jars. The product of the eight months 
prior to December being §29,000. The furniture factories 
furnish the following amounts as being manufacture*! here : 
H. Dinwoodey, §28,245; Sorenson & Carlquist, §10,000; 
Co-operative Furniture Company, §16,000. The Provo 
Woolen Mills supplied to tlie market goods to the value of 
§180,000, §120,000 worth being sold in this city, and with 
the facilities of the mills the product could easily have 




From paintinds bu H.L.A.CULMER. 

SCENES NEAR SALT LAKE CITY. 



i»iJ^"^iJ;.V°i('^'' 




COUNTY COURT HOub^. 



TENTH DISTRICT SCHOOL. 



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S. W. DARKE, 

Attorne 



WILLIAM FULLER, 



Notary Public 



g^ ^^ lijv^lRirM ^ C#» 



l^^^ire Insurance 



V 



'Ptrritorv. 



K represent ten of the l)est Anieriean and Korei.siii I'^ire Insuninee Companies, 
who luive always paid promptly every dollar oC onr losses by fire m tiie 



Our Rates are the Pacific Insurance Union Rates. 



Our Companies are Conservative and Sure. \^ 



We nive perM)nal attention to all our risks and thus insure full satisfai-tion. 



iFE Insurance 




VK pride ourselves with havint;- one of the l.est \Mo Insnranee Companies in 
th.. Tnion-THE MANHATTAN-'-ver T.nirrv-iMVi-. years ohl, with 
a Capital of over KLF.VEN MllddOX DOLI.AUS. S.'nd for plan of our New 
Endowment Scheme, and our ll)-20 Insurance Investment Bond, hy which yon can 
insure for Id, lo, 20 years, or at death, either before or aft<.T those stated times. 
Onr Investment Bonds tinaraiitee o 1 per cent, profit on money invested. 



Our pi-R^tice in the Land Ollice in Salt Lake City, an.l the i>ension OlVuv, Wash 
inirtou, is (|nite extensive, and we make a specialty of contests. 



Office : No. 110 Main Street, 



4 
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C71 



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DAVIS, HOWE & GO., 



ManiilUcturerb ofall kinds of 



Milling, Mining 



m- — Smelting Machinery 

STEAM ENGINES, BOILERS, ETC. 



H Special and Prompt Attention Given to Repairs 



I AVING a Large Assortment of Patterns, we are 
prepared to fill all Orders with despatch and 
Reasonable Terms and Lowest Prices. 



127 N FIRST WEST STREET, 
Salt Lake City, Utah. 



Rocky : Mountain : Churn. 

Patented March 2, 1886 

Manufactured by C. M. DONELSON, 
149 E. SECOND SOUTH STREET, SALT LAKE CITY. 



BEST CHVHX IX THE HTORLD. 



Admitted by the 
Best Butter Makers to 
be tlie Most Perfect 
Churn made. 

Will make the best 
Butter in the Shortest 
Time, and witli tlie 
least amount of labor, 
of any Churn ever l)e- 
fore invented. 




As Easily Cleaned as 

a Milk Pail. 

Will Churn in from 

•5 to 1.5 Minutes. 

We give a Dairy Tlier- 
mometer with each 
Churn. 

FOR SALE AT ALL THE 
LEADING STORES. 



TESTIMONIALS. 

Rocky Mountain Churn Co., 

Gentlemen: We have carefully examined your Patent Churn, and take plea- 
sure in stating- that wc believe it is one of the best inventions in that line ever 
broiiphl before the public, and we have no doubt but that this churn will commend 
itsell to every practical fanner and dairyman as beine a great invention aad 
labor saving^ machine. In (act we cannot speak too highly of it. 

H. S. Eldkhdge, Supl. Z. C. M. I.; S. P. Teasdbl, merchant. Salt Lake 
City; Feramorz Little, ex-mayor, Salt Lake City; G. K. Bolbnk, 
manager grocery department Z. C. M. I.; Joseph R. Walker, 
president Union National Bank, Salt Lake City; B. G. KayboOLb, 
cashier Union National Bank, Salt Lake City; Pavky, Walden & 
Co.; H. W. Lawkknce, and many others. 

'^^ — Give it a Trial— =^ 



1 HEl OAE.T IjAKH 




MOST POPULAR PAPER Hetweeu DEN VER & M FRANCISCO. 

/IvIvK/K 

^ ^°-^^gJ ^rgest City_ Cvrc"^'°^ 

Daily, by mail, i year, $7.^0; 6 months, $4. 00; j months, 
$2.00. 75 cents per month by carrier. 

Weekly, $2.30 per year; $1.50 eight months. 

ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED UPON APPLIGATION. 



In Conncclion with the .ibove, the Finest Equipped 

Job 0rrieE and ^indery 



-In Ihe West- 



Low Prices and First-Class Work Guaranteed 



jV.uJlf'i'' ■'*,,, 




r. n. BISHOP, 

161 nycj^uiisr st., 

p. O. Box 1094. I Salt Lake City. 



ALL WORK CAREFULLY EXECUTED. 



^^Sra^i Minerals and Mineral Waters Analyzed. 



H. W. COKBETT, 

Vice-President. 



Edwakd Hall, 

Secretary. 



THB OREGOXT 
Fire & Marine Insurance Company 

OF PORTLAND, OREGON. 

Does a Conservative, Safe Business. 



CAPITAL PAID UP, 
CASH ASSETS, 



$220,100.00. 
$300,000.00. 



S. W. DARKE & CO , Agents, 
« SALT LAKE CITY. 




A. FISHER'S BREWER 




COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE 













Hi^ 

w 



'si^mmfim^mm^ . ./..mm^ 



V^£'i^^-^:.^imim^k^,izs,Mm. 



W' 






HUSLER & CO.S FLOUR MIL^ 




FULLER'S HILL. 




A. M. GRANT, 

Siipfrttilfftiient. 



The EAGLE FOUNDRY & MACHINE CO, 

-H-Iron '>■ pounders -i- arid •:• ]V[acliiiiists-;-h- 



'WaM*^ lE€>Iiy9 Iksmm. Tm-i^^ik^'^ ^ X'^a:SiljiMga 



SPECIAL ATTENTION 6IVEN 10 THE EhECl ION OF Corner West Temple and I. 

MACHINERY OF ANY DESCRIPTION. Second South Streets. > 



JOBBING ft REPAIEINQ WORK OF ALL KINDS. 



g,Orders from Abroad Solicited 



SALT LAKE CITY. 



rhe Salt Lake Triliiiiie 

DAILY AND WEEKLY, 

S^^LT LJ^iCEl OITY. 



Most Enterprising and Wide-awake 
Journal in the Mountain Country. 



L<lf(jni- CiiVKlation flia/i n/l tin ollnr I'tuli jjdjurK 
cotithincd. 

It prints, bmdm the Rnjuhtr Tc/iyrd/iliic Rcpurl, ii.s 
much more of Spccidla. 

Tlie best Adrerthhiff Mcd'mia in tlic Interior. 

The gre<d Non-Mormon Paper. 

The Voice of Loifdti/ and Lihrni/iti/ i-ri/in;/ in <i 
Demse M'Udernegn. 

Editorial paye uneipialhd. All Jhpartmcnt.'i an.-<iir- 
jxussed. 

DAILY, per year, $13. WEEKLY, per year, *«. 

ADVERTISING RATES ON APPLICATION. 



>:empire meat market^- 




COR. COMMERCIAL AND FIRST SOUTH STREETS, 

i^Tuie„ho„c,-,- SALT LAKE CiTY. hi-, o. ii...v ,o*,h 



SALT LAKE IRON, LIME & ROCK Ca 



p. O. Box 973. 



F. A. PASCOE, Sole Agent. 



Telephone 270. 



OFFICE AND DEPOT 






-^SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH.. 



(H^eiiPiPS' ^ KMjffl^i, m^saaff ©apsalaa!''© ISiifSslsjaiiff^^ |iias!l Ht^jfiili ©2 Ft©,jpigi>«sff's I'leJl^ffl, 



nvcjLKiE] n^o :PTJi?.CTa:^^sE]s 



— OF — 



m 



MM& MM\ €» mSC .M^ -asr/ MMl JiXll 
9THE® 

Real Estate and Loan Agent-^^E^ 

-^EEE^Notary Public & Conveyancer, 

At 161 S, MAIN ST, (Under T, R, Joues & Co/s, Bank), 
SAkir LAKE G\i:m, - - \mM\y 

Unless you Want Value Kecfived for vour Moncv. 



NON - RESIDENT INVESTMENTS A SPECIALTY. 

Kastern Ki^ferern-i/s given mi Application. 




J. C. MUBPHY. C. W. CAFFALL. 



J.C. 



MANUFACTURERS OF 



Americas Fat, Frintisg Wheels, 

SELF-INKING, DATING, POCKET AND PENCIL 
STAMPS. 



ALL THE LATEST NOVELTIES. 



218 S. MAIN STREET, 

P. 0. BOX 456. Salt Lake City. 



BJLJLCK OIX CAXJSTXC mMJLBMJm, 

^he ^Oit '^-onicrful gvalin^ ^cdicinc ever giicovcrcd, for ^an and 5ica6t. 




VETERINARY USE 



FOR 

I'le.sh Wounds, 

Hinn.s iind Scalds, 
Grease Ileols, 

IlarnosK (ialls, 
(juckcl Teats, 

I'ilf.S, 

Fistulas, 

Thrusli, 
And All Sores that recjuiro 
Healing. 

IT HAS NO EQUAL. 







%fL 



No Stetble or 
Coniple'te 



Household 



It is pronounced bv ;ill who 
have used it to be so much superior 
to all others that there is no cbm- 




SOLD ■ 

- ALL 

i^fJjGGt^l^ 






*I!\ITERIVAL* 

HUMAN USE, 

FOR 
Kidney and 

Bladder AflTections, 
Cough, 

Croup, 

Whoo])ing Cougli, 
Sore Throats, 
Diptheria, 

Constipation, 

riles. 
And all Tulmonary 
AflTections. 

The only Remedy yet found 
that will cure Bright's 
Disease. 

AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. 

Ask your Dru^g'ist to Order it 
Tor you if he does not have it ia 

Slock. 






Z" DR. C. W. NUNN, V. S., Veterinary Pharmacy, 71 W. First South St., Sa/t Lake City. 



GKTTINI& T© TH)E FKONT. 



•:••• James \/ j^arbley 



-5:i2^DEALER IN: 



LUMB[miTII,PICeS,8IISy00l]S,l!LINBS 

MOULDINGS AND OTHER BUILDING MATERIAL, 



340 First East St. 'State Road), Half Block north of 8th Ward Square, 
Telephone 113 SALT LAKE CITY. 



^alt <- Lal^e -t- Vinegar -t- Zo,^ 

J. W. MAXFIELD, Manager. 

—Manufacturers of— 



PURE MALT & WHITE WINE Vieil 



/J7 /-»•.?/ £as/ S/. , betwee7i First and Second South, 

p. o. iio.x 657 3 AWT Lake Citt, Utah. 




Il'iira _ 



SWEDISH EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH. 




CATHOLIC CHURCH 




CNTAH.O M.^^, FArv^ 



been made to reach double this amount. The company 
used 400,000 pounds of wool, and shipped 250,000 pounds 
of the grades not used in this mill to the East. The 
value of confectionery made was §89,840. Trunks 
and sanijde ca.ses valued at 811,000; show-cases, SI 7,700. 
Of lime rock there was 30,172 tons quarriwl for flux- 
ing purposes, fifty cords for building, and 00,000 for mak- 
ing lime. The value of "Valley Tan Kcmalics," med- 
icines, manufa<'turcd by C". E. Johnson, ^^■as .?4,000. The 
Deseret Paper Mills manulacturcd print, wrapping and 
book papers to the value of §;)0,000 ; it is run oidy part of 
the time at present. Salt Lake City also boasts of one of 
the best and largest soda water works in the country, 
belonging to Dcnhalter «t Sons, wIkj own the finest gene- 
rator ever sent to the West. The Pioneer Roller Mills 
consumed 3,600,000 pounds of wheat, and Hasler & 
Co., 10,230,000 pounds. The hunber used during the past 
year aggregated nearly seven hundred carloads, each car load 
averaging eleven thousand feet. This amount is in addition 
to the amount of native liuuber used. The manufacture of 
millinery goods amounted to §35,000 ; hai'ness and sad- 
dles, §150,000. The exports were: Wheat, 12,000,000 
pounds ; oats, 200 car loads ; barley, 500 car loads ; 
^ lucerne, 1,000 tons; potatoes, 10,000,000 pounds; rye, 
twenty ear loads; sheep pelts, §30,000; hides, §65,000; 
flint deer hide, 25,000 pounds; buckskin, 10,000 pounds; 
poultry', §20,000; eggs, §225,000; honey, §16,000; 
dried fruits, §60,000. The Germania Lead Works 
has been successful in the manufacture of lead pipe 
and white lead, made from the ore mined in the 
neighborhood. Then also, paint is made at Provo, 
an excellent quality, and a ready market is found 
here for it. Besides these, there are an infinitude 
of articles of a domestic nature that are of general manu- 
facture, but regarding which statistics are not available. 
These include brooms, hats antL caps, carpets, yarns, stock- 
ings, cements, glue, brushes, willow ware, artificial flowers, 
strawbraid, coke, brick and adobies, wagons and carriages, 
crockery and pottery ware, etc. Utah has nearly driven 
out competition and sto.ppetl importation, by the acknowl- 
edged excellence of one article produced, viz: tlie manu- 
Bfaeture of cheese. There is scarcely a branch of industry 
known in the world, which depends upon mineral resource, 
which can not be inaugurated here with the assurance of 
the existence of resources that twenty generations will never 
see indications of being exhausted. It has been said of 
the Great Salt Lake basin, M'hieh forms the larger part of 
Utah: "The entire basin is a vast laboratory of nature, 
where all the primitive processes have been carried out, on 
a scale so vast, as to make man's dominion, at first sight, 
seem forever impossible." The Salt Lake Chamber of 
Commerce was organized in April, 1887, for the following 
purposes, viz : To stimulate and to promote the growth of 
this Territory; to develop its agricultural, fruit growing 
and mining interests; its banking and brokerage; its 
manufactories and arts; its stock and wool-growing, 
slaughtei'ing and pacldng iuterestd; its architecture and 



public improvements; its commercial education; and to 
organize and provide for a bureau of statistics in relation 
to nianufact tiring, mining, commercial, financial and in- 
dustrial aftairs of public interest and value. To correct 
trade abuses and to secure uniformity in commercial laws 
and customs ; to harmonize and facilitate business inter- 
course; to arbitrate differences and disputes; to promote 
equity and to treat with railways in the interest of our 
commerce ; and for representation in all other trade issues. 
Its officers are : President, W. S. McCornick ; First Vice 
President, George A. Lowe; Second Vice President, Frank 
W. Jennings ; Secretary, Hugh C. Wallace ; Treasurer, 
Thomas R. Jones ; Board of Directors — W. H. Reming- 
ton, George A. Lowe, F. H. Meyers, F. W. Jennings, 
W. S. McCornick, J. C. Conklin, F. H. Auerbach, 
E. Kahn, James Glendinning, M. H. Walker, H. 
L. A. Culmer. The Chamber of Commerce will 
extend every reasonable aid and give hearty support 
to the starting of new manufactories and every enterprise 
which will promote the development of the resources of 
Utah or the building up of Salt Lake City. Facts, figures 
and information concerning the resources of the Territorj', 
and the opportunity for investing capital, will be furnished 
upon applicration to the Secretary. 



The followng condensation of a circular issued by 
the Denver and Rio Grande Railway, in January of the 
present year, is an interesting and reliable presentation of 
our agricultural resorces : 

Fair Utah wheat ranks in the East with the best No. 
2 Red, which is the highest grade that appears in most of 
the Eastern markets. Our choicest qualities, raised under 
the most favorable conditions, are a unique product with 
scarcely an equal in America. A number of points in 
Colorado, especially Denver, are already buyers of our 
wheat this year, while some shipments have been made to 
Kansas City. Enquiries are also being made from Cali- 
fornia. Utah wheat has a brighter, larger kernel than 
that of the East, and though no handsomer than that of 
California, it is firmer and its nutriment more concentrated. 
We have known parties who were keeping up work- 
horses, to pay 25 to 30 per cent, more for Utah oats of 
ordinary quality than for a fair grade of Eastern. This 
was a couple of years ago when cut rates of freight per- 
mitted the bringing in of Eastern oats. Nothing more 
conclusive can be said of the real value of our oats than 
this, which, after all, only represents current oj)inion 
among those who have tried both. Utah oats, therefore, 
command a stifl' price and j)arties looking here for a sup- 
ply should understand that in return for the comparatively 
high figure asketl, the real fmling power of our grain is 
proportionately high. Utah oats have ranged in price 
during recent years from IJ to l.{ cents \wt pound on cars. 
■ Usually, our barley is of nuignificcut appearant* and 
probably fifty car loads of fine ([uality now remain here 
awaiting a market. It is of the white club variety for 



brewing purposes. In 1885, our brewing barley was 
exported in great quantities to St. Louis, Milwaukee, Cal- 
ifornia and other points, where it invariably graded as 
fully up to the best Canadian brewing. Utah barley beer is 
advertised all over the Union, and signifies the highest 
attainable degree of merit. It is the use of this barley 
which gives Utah beer so high a standard. Indeed, our 
white club brewing barley will hold its own anywhere as 
a strictly fancy product. Besides this grade, Utah has for 
sale about a million pounds of mixed feed barley. 

There are a few cars of rye annually oifered here 
at figures usually ranging over one cent per pound. The 
quality is superb and the yield fair. 

Utah does not pose as a corn countni- and rarely has 
anv for export. The hot, sultry nights which corn requires 
are not characteristic of our climate. East of tlie Wasatch 
Mountains, however, along the line of the Denver and Rio 
Grande Western, especially at Green River, it is likely 
that corn growing will prove a considerable industry-. 

A special providence seems to have reserved this 
Territory for the cultivation of lucern, often called Alfalfa, 
which the farming people of Utah have learned to look 
upon as one of the greatest blessings that has yet been 
vouchsafed them. The best crops come from lands that 
cannot well be plowed because of their rough character. 
Excellent results have been had by merely clearing off the 
brush and casting the seetl over such ground. It takes 
longer to get a good start this way, and irrigation is more 
difficult than if the ground were stirred up, but it thrives 
better in the end. Lucern will do well even on ground 
that is too steep for a mowing machine, if only sufficient 
water can be got on it to give it a start. Its average 
growth is about three feet, though we have known it to 
reach over six feet when left for seed. A serious drought 
may spoil the crop for the time being, but the following 
year it will come up as good as ever. 

Utah is, par excellence, the country for lucern seed 
and from 300 to 400 tons are exported annually at prices 
varying fi-om seven to eleven cents per pound. 

We raise some Red and AVhite Clover Seed but 
have little left beyond our own needs for export. 

The L'tah potato has a reputation for excellence all 
over Americ-a and even in Great Britain. Other climes 
have tried in vain to match oiu- product but the attempt 
seems futile. For many years great quantities have lieen 
exjiorted from this Territory, and it looks as if we shall 
continue to do so for all time to come. We have seen a 
lot of sixteen bushels that went throughout twelve potatoes 
only to the bushel. The King of the Early, Peerless and 
Compton's Surprise yield in favoreil loc-dities about 400 
bushels to the acre. With high cultivation, we have even 
lieard of 1,000 bushels being raised to the acre. 

Utah has also a fine reputation for carrots, which 
often yield, of good quality, as much as 1,200 bushels to 
the acre; also for onions, turnips, parsnips, radishes, etc. 
Beets thrive astonishingly well, and far-seeing men fortell 
that one day, the large tracts of low lying but now 



unwatered lands on the western side of this valley and 
elsewhere will be under cultivation to the Sugar Beet for 
the manufacture of sugar. 

There is no rea.son why the cultivation of peanuts 
should not take its plac-e as one of our foremast root pro- 
ducts. It has been clearly demonstrated that our climate 
and soil are especially favorable to their gro'wth, and every 
attempt that has lieen made — which was only on an exper- 
imental scale — has born out this idea. 

Of green stufts, we annually export large quantities 
of cabbage, cauliflower and celery, the latter growing 
exceptionally fine. 

South of L'tah Lake and in various other localities 
are grounds suitable to the growth of flax, which is native 
to our soil, and would pay well for cultivation. 

Hops are also native to L^tah, its trailing vines liter- 
ally overrunning every other kind of foliage in manv of 
our canvons. The picking of "wild hops has yielded con- 
siderable pin-money to the country people, and Nature 
could not tell in plainer wortls that this is pre-eminently a 
region favorable to their cultivation. 

The same causes which give excellence to the grains 
and vegetables of Utah, also stamp her orchard products 
mth a high caste. Fresh fruits are exjwrted in consider- 
able quantities and, wherever sent, take the highest place 
and command the readiest sale. In general terms, the 
superior characteristics are firmness, beauty and, above all, 
fine flavor. Utah peaches are shipped, wrapped and 
unwrapped, in boxes of about twenty pounds each and 
find a ready market in Colorado and Idaho. Our peach 
trees thrive best on light loam and gravely soil. 
I The apple is now generally acknowledged to be 

more free from worms (codling moth) than for some 
years previous and thousands of boxes have been shipped 
East and Nor^h by parties in Ogden, Salt Lake, Provo, 
Springville and other places. It is probable that each 
succeeding year will see our apples fi-eer from worms and 
that, in a few years, they will have disappeared altogetlier. 
Bv papering the apples and shipping in refrigerator cars 
they may be safely transported long distances late in the 
Fall. Green apples are a staple product of the Territory-, 
and notwithstanding the heavy shipments made, the de- 
mand last season was not equal to the supply. 

There are many fine plums raised in Utah ; the growth 
of plums last season fell much short of our usual quantity 
and we were far from supplying the demand. 

There is a sure demand for more good Utah pears 
than have yet been produced. There is a lack chiefly of 
early varieties of which we have few besides the Bartlett. 
Growers have paid over much attention to Winter j^ears, 
which ripen too late to secure favorable sale. They now 
realize the fact, and it is likely that future years will find 
a better supply of earlier kind-. The UtiUi pear is an ex- 
tremely rich fruit. 

In most seasons, Utali has a good crop of apricots for 
export, and cherries in limited supply, while grapes are in 
good quantity, but at points favorable for shipping are not 




EAGLE EMPORIUM. 



p. O. Box g-]3. 



108 W. First South Street, 



Salt Lake City. 



Telephone 2yo. 



Iljanufachircrs' |^^cnf, J|rf Pceoratioiis anb ^iiilbcrs' ^iippfies. 

Sole Agents for the Celebrated VVilUsden {Eiiglisk) Waterproof Roo/iing, IJncrusta Hangings, Dadoes, Friezes 
and Mouldings, Encaustic and Fine Art I iles, Wood Carvings and Mouldings, Picture Frames and Flozver Boxes 
of Linousta and Hood Carvings in Cold, Etc.; A fag it IVindow Screens. 

Lime, Cement, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, Plaster of Paris, Building Rock, Terra Cotta Enrichments. 

«5fl?l> J^c^^^T ^o^ THE! ^TJLO^^n^ I^O^A^IDEI^ OO. 

OFFICE: 218 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

. . -_ — . — .„.. a > 



nvYCR's BeeK stoRC, 



4}- S^^LT L^^ICE CIT^", TJTJLH. 



aiij Stationery House in lltali, 



Everything^ that is usually kept in a 
Firsf-class Rook .Store can always be 
found at DWVER'S, at Lowest Whole- 
sale and Retail. 




EDUCATIONAL : AND : SCHOOL : SUPPLIES 

A SPECIAUTY. 

Orders fioni out of-town Proniptlv Filled. 




THE 



-LE7IDII)G-«- 



"F/ISF?I01]/IBLE-<- 



^prench, English and Scotch Cloths are of iriy Own Iniportation:-- 



FIRST-CLASS WORK AND PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED. 



it 111 Matki Bx., Opposite ElAGnH EXkeportum 
s^A^LT l.a.:k:e! city. 



P 0. BOX 356. 



as handsome as those from California. In Southern Utah 
they raise heautiful grapes of fine rich flavor, the average 
yieia per aere being 6,:2(J() pounds, aoeording to the latest 
(lata. Strawberries and rasjiberries are both native to 
Utah, a.s is the red and blaek currant, lender cultivation, 
the yield is very large and of surpassing cpiality. 

" Such is the wide reputation wiiich Utah enjoys for tiie 
excellence of her dried fruits that they conuuaud a fanvy 
price throughout the entire United States. In com- 
petition with the best Tennessee they bring in Chicago and 
other cities from two to four times the price. The cause 
is of coHi-se, jjrimarily the excellent quality of our fruits 
with its rich flavor; but we owe to the peculiarity of our 
climate the ability to sun-tlry with such sugggfiB^^ i third 
reason is the singular rai)idity with whictS^pB^. Wap- 
orates in this region, enabling the drying 'pr^ftess to take 
place rapidly in the day-time, while the aksence of dew, 
prevents the back-sets during the night. Fruits dried l»y 
artificial processes lose part of their virtues, and it is 
doubtless whether much of it would be done were otiier 
climates as favorable as our own to sun-drying. Thus it 
is that Utah sun-dried fruits occupy a place by themselves 
in the markets of America. A fancy article, that has 
never yet been produced here in anything like tiie quantity 
that could be sold, is the Salt Lake peeled peach. There 
is nothing like it for fine flavor anywhere. It keeps well 
and commands twice or thrice the figure of the unpeeled. 
The ajn-ieots dried here invariably find a ready market, 
it l)eing an exceptional year when they are not cleared out 
before Christmas. The price always ranks high and the 
fruit is a general favorite. 

Sometimes a.s many as a hundred thousand pounds uf 
plums find tiieir way to this market. Attention is now 
l)eing turned to the German prune fi)r drying purposes, 
and these will probably be kept separate. Tiie time is at 
hand when tiiese will take the place of tliose imp<.rte<l an<l, 
in a few years, expoi-ts are sure to fi>llow. 



Very few dried peai-s have, so far, come to market. 
A very limited sujiply of nectarines have been brought in 
and quickly sold at a higli price. This fruit is so fine in 
ap))earance and so ricli in pidiiy substance that its drving 
should be encouraged. 

A novel protluct, which first (K*>a.sions suqjrise and 
then finds great favor wjierever iutr<xluce<l, is the dried 
ground cherry. This fruit is nati\-e here and has not been 
cultivated, to our knowledge. It grows only too frwly 
for tlie farmers, however, as it .spreads with great vigor. 
When scalded and drie<l, the fruit is of a beautiful, golden, 
cleaidy sort, making excellent pies, sauw and |)reserves. 



Dnll times have a|>parently ])assed away, and arelieing 
succeeded by a spirit of renewed jtul)iic cimfidence in the 
stability and resources of tiie city and Territory. Rumors 
are constantly afloat of radroads from the Ea.st and North, 
organizing and feeling their way hither, and corps of sur- 
veyors are scattered over all the surrounding country, 
seeking for the best routes, witii this city as the objective 
])oint. Kast<'rn and Western capitalists are investing in 
our real estate and our mines. Transfers of proj>erty in 
tliis city run up to $200,000, weekly, and the wise ones 
])redict this as but tlic commencement of the glorious futuix? 
which awaits our (iardcn City, the metro]»olis of the 
Kockv Mountain I'Oiiioii. 



Before leaving our beautiful City we urge upon 
visitors to take a look at it from the "Tourist's Tower" 
on Prospect Hill, as from tiiis ]K)iiit can be ol)tained a 
satisfying view of the City and its entrancing surroundings, 
which can be comparetl with the view of Salt J^ake City in 
IS."}."}, printed witli tiie reading matter in the front portion 
of this work; also to visit Rosebank Cottage, the pretty 
hi>nie of our townsman, Mr. Rol>eit I\ve; Iwith of which 
itlaccs can be takt-n in on the mntc ol'a drive to the Fort. 








<^-'*'^«^««i|^ 



ST. MARK'S HOSPITAL. 




RESIDENCE OF W. S, GODBE 



>•. j^'*'': >;™,lt' .'-1 



/■'■"•♦^^iigi-W 







RfSIDtNCE OF MRS. JULIA A. KIMBALL 







RESIDf-NCt 



7th OISTHICT SCHOOL 




18th ward independent school and chapel. 



JOHNCCUTLERaBRD. 




'II J.'UJ !'iJ.!.'-'_'LU.|J! .' ' I ""III' I 'I'liJ' iiii'!,'iil »i i i ii.n w i | . B ffe 



JOHN C. CUTLER &. BRO 




MADSENS STORE. 






•oo 



mm 



E^EX^! 



fait Bake gitu, Utah; Haiku and Belle Vuc, Idaho. 

Careful attention given to the Sale of Ores and Bullion. We solicit Consignments, guaranteeing the Highest 
Market Prices. 



— COLLECTIONS MADE AT LOWEST RATES. — 



Execute Orders for the Purchase or Sale of Stocks and Bonds at New York and San Francisco. 

We sell Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers on leading Cities of the United States; also furnish Sight 
Drafts or Remit Funds to London, Dublin, Berlin, Copenhagen, Paris, Stockholm, and all other prominent point 
in Europe, at Lowest Rates of Exchange. 

^OTI^E ^OCOTjnSTTS SOLIOITEID. 



PRINCIPAL CORRESPONDENTS: 



Nbw York — Importers' and Tradert' Na- 
tional Bank, Chemical National Bank, 
Kountze Brothers. 

Chicago— Commercial National Bank. 

St. Louis — States Savings Association. 

Kansas City — National Bank of Kansas 
City. 



Omaha — Omaha National Bank.^ 

Dbnver — City National Bank, Denver Na- 
tional Bank. 

EvANSTON, Wyo. — Beckwith & Co. 

Helena, Mont. — First National Bank. 

Butte, Mont. — First National Bank, Clark 
& Larabie. 



Ogdbn — Commercial National Bank. 
Hailey, Idaho — McCornick & Co. 
Bellbvuk, Idalio — G. A. McCornick & Co. 
Elko, Neviida — J. Hender.'ion. 
San Fkancisco — First National Bank, The 

Crocker Woolworth National Bank. 
London, England — Martin & Co. 



S. C. DALLAS. 



W. 8. HBDOBS. 



Dallas & Hedges, 

Architects and ScPEHiiiTENDENTs 



Deseret National Bank Building', 

sjL.x^T XjJL.k:e cit-^", tjtjl-Ieb:. 



Telephone 359. 



Our List of Properties Can Not be Excelled. 



J. M. KNOX & Co. 

First Door West of Union Ticket Office, 

saLlT lake city. 




— Breeders of — 

Half-lireed Polled Adeus 



AJ.SO 

Haif-lireeil Hereford 



S©Itl©FIEkl3 BIROS., 

-Propriflnrsnf- 




Wholesale ami Retail Ocalers in 

ALL KINDS OF FRESH MEATS. 

Corner Third Sout/t and Main Streets, 
Telephone No. 169. S-A-X-T Ijj^I^E CIT'ST. 



— Dealers in 



Cattle, ^heep and jlorses. 

p. O ADDRESS: 

Salt Lake City and Nephi, Utah. ^^ 





UNITED ELECTRIC CO, 



i-^-'_V--JJl^ .<- - 7- > ■■! 0BE_RNDORFER, Successor 

1 . , .... 



MWiMPomimMMm^ 





J. OBERNDORFER. 




snO'A'S block 



b 




[Mil 



A. C. BRIXEN. 

LOCATION CENTRAL. 



,..— >ggtOpened March 12th, 1887(5!^^ 



M. BRIXEN. 




^pwet, near ^5%, f^^^ 



Electric Calls and Lights. 

ath, Bar and Billiard Room s. 



SALT LAKE CITY. 



'^e^ 





A. C. BRIXEN & BRO., PROPS. 



Rates, $2.00 Per Day. 

street Cacs at 999e. 



^^aisiied jiouse i^ ^''^^ 




CUISINE UNEXGELLED. 



aa^See View of CLIFT HOUSE in half-page lithograph; also in View of North Side, Third South St., from Main, looking West. 



L^ 



'^ ^^K£l^ 



la^iiifia^ 



REAL F.STATE, 
%txnn an5 Cottettion ^g^nts* 

WE MEAN TO MAKE OUR FUTURE BUSINESS CAREER LIKE OUR PAST JUSTIFY 

OUR MOTTO: 



^^9S>a 



(2 Doors South of Z. 0. M. I.) 



«»*l§- 



SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. 




Joseph E. Taylor, 

OF 



Having put in a Large Plant of 
Machinery, I now Manufaetnre my own 
Goods. Ever\'thing in the Undertaking 
Line fnrnished Wliolosale or Retail at 
Prices that Defy Coni])etition. 



■Telephone No. 70- 



FACTORY AND WAREROOMS: 

253 E. First South Street, 

s^XjT Lj^kze city. 



DIEE8T0ES AND OFFIGESSi 

F. W. Jennings, Pres't. and Mgr. 
J. A. Jennings , Vice-President. 
Isaac Jehninos. 



Post Office Box 282 



Jab. E. Jennings, Sec'y. and Treas. 



Bitstvti Woolen MiU$ Co., 



(INCORPORATED) W^ 



!3yCGESS0RS TO \/\LL\I\t^ JeNNINGS Zl ^Q^S 









-Manufacturers of- 



FLANNELS, DRESS GOODS, LINSEYS, YARNS, 

ooooooooooo 

ETC., ETC., 



SALT LAKE CITY, UT/IPi. 




DEPOT OF THE UTAH CENTRAL RAILWAY. 







DtPOT OF THt DENVER & RIO GRANDE WESTERN RAILWAY. 



'Ml 



iM^MB 



Miners aud Dealers in the Only Geiniiu*' 



-Sold in the Salt Lake Market. 



F. A. MITCHELL, 

Secy and Manager. 



OFFICE: No. 40 Main Street, Salt Lake City. 



RAILROAD EXCHANGE HOTEL 



ESTABLISHED 1872 



(Directly Opposite Utali Central Depot 



REBUILT 1885. 



SALT LAKE CITY, 



UTAH. 



IS PRACTICALLY FIREPROOF. 

In Appoinlments and Furnishings Equal to any Hotel in tlie City. 

EUROPEAN PLAN. MEALS, 25 (Viifs. 

The Best One Dollar per Day House hi the J I 'est. 



The "OLD RELIABLE," 

On the OLD CORNER, 

The .same OLD BEN. F. VVHITTEMORE, Pro)). 



#T C. /IRODSTKONG 




VVh..l.s;,U-;ind K.-t;iil Dealer in 

F/our, Grain, Feed, 

GRASS & GARDEN SEEDS. 

Officp and Store, 30 E. First South St. 

WAREHOUSE: 

for. Fourth West & Second South Sts 

Salt Lake Ci»y. 

Tclciihone t,. 



" Throw T?Kijsic to iKz ©ogs." 

PARALYSIS, RHEUMATISM, EPILEPSY, INSOMNIA, 
SCIATICA, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, and in fact all NER- 
VOUS and MUSCULAR DISEASES promptly succumb to the 
Electrical Treatment of 

Dr. H. E. GROW, 

T/ie Celebrated Electropalhist, 

112 W. SOUTH TEMPLE STREET, 

JS^-A LADY ASSISTANT ALWAYS IN ATTENDANCE. =^8 



GA SH reR RA6S 

~HE RAG- WAI^EMOl^SE 

IS NOW AT 

Where all Classes and Kinds of Rags and Waste Pa])or, Broken 

(ilass. Bottles, Rubber Shoes, Brass, Copper and Old 

Iron will be received, and Cash Paid for them. 

ECONOMY IS WEALTH. SAVE, AND BE SAVED FINANCIALLY. 



B. GOODWIN, 242 W. First South St. 



MAIN STREET, 



WHIIPB S 



gg, SALT LAKE CITY. 



♦»»»»»»»»*o»>«o» ; ««»»«ooo>>»eo>o»>oo 



A. PODLECH, Prop. 



The Best Family Hotel in .Salt 
Lake City. 



RATES, $2.00 PER DAY. 

»<OIIO>0>80 H IC>l>>>>>tO« M I M i mM 




«^««««««««« 



E*'''''=''>d ^fficcA in the puildinq. 

C |||[lffW OPPOSITE the COURTHOUSE, 

^^^ ''' "■'^ ' POST OFFICE and 

OPERA HOUSE. 



Hcadciuarters for Busine.s.s and 
Mining Men. 



»»««««««««»«« 



ESTABLISHED 1855. 



INCORPORATED 1885. 

6z ieET.2^ini. TDISXTO-O-ISTS. 



Drugs, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Garnishes, Assay Goods of all Kinds, 

Druggisis' Sundries, California Wines and Brandies, Imparted Ales, Porters and Fine Liquors. 



AGENTS FOR AMERICAN AND FOREIGN .MANUFACTURERS OF ALL GOODS PERTAINING TO THE DRUG TRADE. 



IPS^Sfe Our Building in View of Main ."Street, looking South from First South Street. 




I 



Factory, 171 Maim Street. 






'-f*«-<!Manufacturer of Finoj*^^**- 



Salt Lake City 



UKYjmA wjmB-mMm ckjars 



p. o. Hox arti. 



Nos. 171 and 173 S. Main Street, 




bALT LAKE FOUNDRY. 




WALKER OPERA HOUSE 



The HTmlkei* Brothers 0©impmmy, 

^ — Wliolftsale and Retail— ^ 

Carpets, Clothing, Furnishings, Boots, Shoes, Eto. 

Agents for the GEL 1=1 IB RATED IWJAR^SVIkkE BLANKETS and Underwear. 



MAIN STREET, SALT LAKE CITY. 



TlieJiiveiiileliijtriictor 

PRINTING AND PUBLISHING OFFICE. 



UEATLY PONE, 



-.&L. :F'-u.11 Stoc:k: of— 



Books, Stationery & Sunday School Supplies 



iKEPT ON HAND^ 



^ermA of gubAcription to "|PuVcnile ^nAtructor, $2 00 per year. 

^J^ILJT LJLICE CIT:2". 



OLDEST ESTABLISHED IN SALT LAKE CITY, 

{Coffee Jo/in's Old Stand), 
R. C. EASTON, - Proprietor. 



First-Class Merchants' Lunch, 25c. 

From 12 to 3 Daily. 
MEALS AT ALL HOURS FROM 25c. UPWARDS. 



¥JB.Wm B. RCOGEIRS, 



BRANCH HOUSE: 



BooK^, gi'^i'ioplEi^y £jlD toy^. 



^Insurance^ 



OFFICE: Safe Deposit Vaults, Union National Bank, 

MAIN ST., SALT LAKE CITY. 




DR. C. W. HIGGINS, the Well-known Specialist, ha.s opened an Eclectic 
Medical Disjiensary in hi.s Elegant Parlor.s at No. 30 W. THIRD SOUTH 
STREET, Denhaiter Block. 

iDie. c. ""v^. szio-o-iisrs. 

Microscopic and Analytic Physician, 

Has practiced in Salt Luke I'ity fourteen years, ami tlie wonderful and well-established 
cures lie has efiected in that time prove tlie scientilic principles on which his remedies are 
(compounded. The mode of forming a diagnosis by the aid of the microscope enables him 
to detect the ))rimary cause of disease and cU'ect a radical cure. The doctor has cured 
thousands of cases of Nervous Debility, Mental and Physical Weakness, Loss of Manhood 
anil Nervous Prostration, the result of early indisi-rotions and excesses, and will forfeit 
Five Hundred Dollars for any case taken under his treatment which he fails to cure. 

Syphilis, (ionorrhiea. Gleet, Stricture and all old lingering diseases which vitiate the 
blood and impair the system, thoroughly and permanently cured. Mr Treatment is sure, 
certain and specific. 

Ofiice Hours from 10 a. m. to 12 a. m., and from 2 p. m. to 8 p. m. Call or address 
Dr. C. W. Higoins, 30 W. Third Soutu Strket. Residence, G49 N. First West Street, 
Salt Lake City, Utah Territory. Electrical JMedicated Baths in the Office. 



Geo. M. Scott, 

President. 



H. S. RUMFIELD, 

Becretary. 



Jas. Glendinning, 

Vice-President and Treasurer. 



G ee. M. see rr & eo.. 



(Ixcorporated) 



^* Importers and Dealers ir 



Hardware, Iron, Steel, Iron Pipe, Miners' Tools, Stoves, 

TiisnAr.A.i?/E, nynET^A^Ls, etc. 



® 



@1 



>f/7fl^ cr Genera/ Assortment of Mine, Mill and Smelter Supplies. 



\ 




( 



— Wholesale and Retail Dealers in — 
BELTING, PULLEYS, GAS & WATER PIPE, POWDER, FUSE, CAPS, Etc., 

PACKING, SHAFTING, BRASS & IRON FITTINGS, VALVES, HOSE, 

BABBIT METAL, PLUMBERS SUPPLIES, STOCKHOLM TAR, ROSIN, PITCH and OAKUM. 



Exclusive Agents for Blake Steam Pumps, Brilliant Engine and Cylinder Oil, Buffalo Scales, California 
Powder Co., Roebling's Steel Wtre Rope, Dodge Wooden Pulley Co., Atlas Engines and Boilers. 



VE l)eg to announce to the min- | 
ing community tliat we have | 
seoureil the Agency of the Rand Rock 
Drill & Compressor Co., and carry 
con-stantly in stock a Full Line of -j 




Rock Drills, Air Conipre&sors, Air 
Rci'eivers, Steam and Air Hose, to- 
gether with a Fidl Line of Dupliciite 
Parts for Rand Drills. 



^^ 




HI-blDtN E OF JaWES GLENOINNING 




UTAH DRIVING PARK ASSOCIATION, TRACK AND GROUNDS 



■m-^^m 





ST, JAMES HOTl.L 



CLARK, ELDREDGE & Co., 



©i.^WhotesBl© Dealers ta^tS 



<^ErnnkErij, t Elassware, i WnndenwarE, i Brushes, i StatinnEru, i Eln., i Elc.*^ 

^ —Salt Lake City, Utah. 



s^- 



AMERICAN AND FOREIGN PATENTS. WESTERN AGENCY ESTABLISHED IN 1883. 

IVesieni Correspondejii, 

HENRY COMETT, Solicitor of Patents & Expert in Patent Causes, 

Room 94, 5th Floor, Temple Court, New York, N. Y. 



Twenty Years' Experience as a Solicitor of Patents. 
Specialties. — Diflitult and Important Cases in all Classes of 
Engineering, Metallurgy, Electricit)', Chemistry, Textiles, 
Printing Macliinery and Hydraulics. 



OFFICE, Room 5, Third Floor, Hooper & Eldredge Block, 
p. o. ««» 70S. Main Street, Salt Lake City. 



\VM. H. JONES. 



WM. B. JONES, M. 



-^^Jones ^ Jacobs-i^- 



ENGINEERS and CONTRACTORS. 

MINING MACHINERY. 

WM. E. JACOBS, U. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyor. 



OFFICE : Hooper & Eldredge Block, Main Street, 

P.O. Box 1132. SALT LAKE CITY. 



R. KbETTiNG, 

Room I, Hooper & Eldredge Block, Main Street, 

BALT LAKE CITY« 



Designer of the CULLEN HOTEL, LAKE PARK RESORT, 
KARRICK BUILDING, Etc. 



Wm. Bredemeyer, Dr. Ph., 

niNING ENGINEER, 

U. S. Surveyor and Assayer. 

Hooper & Eldredge Block, 

MAIN STREET, SALT LAKE CITY. 



V. O. liox, 1157. 



Room II. Third floor 



HEADQUARTERS FOR MOR MON PUBLICATIONS. 



LISTS MAILED ON APPCICATION. 



J. 



2G 2v/d:airx St,, Sa,lt 1-ia.lre Cit37-. 
BOOKBEL.LKBS5 STATIOKEKS AND JOB FBINTEBg. 



Publishers of Parr37''s Monthly Magazine, 

The Leading Literary Journal and Best Advertising Mediant in the liockij Mountains. 

I'RICB. - $1.50 I='EI& -A-IsTIsTTJIM:. 



OLDEST, LARGEST and BEST. ESTABLISHED 1841. 

THE MERCANTILE AGENCY, 

For the Protection and Projnotion of Trade and 
Collection of Debts and Claims. 

R. G. DUN & CO., 



-=]120 OIFIPICESa 



GEO. OSMOND, District Manager, Utah, Idaho and 
Montana. 



OFFICE: Over Wells, Fargo & Go's. Bank, Salt Lake City 

Geo. W. Houk, Manager, Helena, Montana. 



People's Forwarding Co., 

STORAGE AND COMMISSION. 

Wholesale Shippers of 

FLOUR, GRAIN, PRODUCE, SALT, Etc. 



Wabrhousks : Cor. Sixth West and Third South Streets, 
Salt Lake City; and on D. & R. G. Track at Whitewater, Colo. 



OFFICE: Walker Opera House. 34 W. Second South St.. 

S.A.^.T Xj-A-ICE CIT-2". 



E. E. EicH, 



Manager. 



-IITSTJI?.E1 -^AriTH- 



RICHARD A. McCURDY, President. 

THE OLDEST ACTIVE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY IN AMERICA AND THE LARGEST IN THE WORLD. 

.A.SSETS, OVEI?/ - ^115,000,000. 
o All Policies are Practically Non - Forfeitable and Incontestable. o 



p. O. Box 241. 



LOUIS HYAMS, District Ag-ent for Utah. 

OFFICE: 229 MAIN STREET, SALT LAKE CITY. 



London and Provincial 

Fl Wmm. COMPANY, 

Of London, - England, 

(LIMITED.) 



CJ^Fxrnjt^n,^ $5,000,000. 

Agent Salt Lake. 



HELVETIA-SWISS 



ite Knsutaiuc i^ompano, 

Of St. Galt. Switzerland. 
CA-FITJ^X,, $20,000,000. 



Agent Salt Lake. 



Bilitist| ^mEi|ipa 



OF TORONTO, CANADA. 

Agent Salt Lake. 



W. J. LYNCH. 



ELI B. KELSEY. ®) 

« -^ KEI«SIEL¥ & l«5i?|Si!Gltl ^ ^ ~" 

istat©, Lean ^ G©ll©©ti©a ^.g©ati 

SEARCHERS OF RECORDS. Notary Public in Office. 
FOUR DOORS NORTH OF WALKER HOUSE, 

SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. 



p. O. BOX 773 



WtJi^^MliS SiBtir 



iati IFffiff^fi^g 




RESIDENCE OF J. E. DOO 




HON. F. LITTLE'S RESIDENCE 




WHOLESALE MILLINERY^RETAIL. 




EMPORIUM WHOLESALE ifftTAIL o, S/'. QQ W^ , , O? WHOLESALE « RETAIL 

BUILDING. MILLINERY. '^' ^Xt/nurriyl/JAoifunj^ '^•^ FANCYGOODS 




SIMON BROS., STORE. 



W. H. Sells. 



W. S. Crismon, Notary. 



1 -^^llS ^ (2piSffl®R*l«' f 

REAL •• ESTATE .* BROKERS, 

Special Atteniion Given to the Purchase and Sale of Outlying Lots and Acreage adjoining City. 

^ ^ ^- 1078. OFFICE: 143 S. Main Street, Salt Lake City. 

fc^rz^a f BROWNING BROTHERS, 168 Main St, OGDEN, UTAH. 






i-—^ 




^HZ ^RQ\JH\HS RirbE 



Manufacturers, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in all kinds of 



^ ^ c». 



Rifles, Shotguns, Pistols, Ammunition, Fishing Tackle, Base Ball Goods, Boxing Glomes, 

Hunting Coals, l/^lfld and Opera Olaaaea, Ice and Holler Skatet, Playing Cardu, Etc. 

In fact Everything in the Shooting and Sporting Line, all of whirli we arc jirepareil to sell at Prices that beat everybody. We have more than double the amount of 

money invested in our business than any other firm west of Chicago has in a similar line. Our stock being the largest, we are enabled to 

fill orders, either large or small, more promptly and satisfactorily than any. We are prepared to do all kinds 

of gun repairintj, choke borcing in the finest manner. We arc also prepared t© do 

machine work from a threshing machine or engine down. 



1877. 






'Q>9J 



— Wholci^ale and Retail — 



^rQeiRTR STREET, Q6BEN, dTAHN 

Particular Attention to Order's. 

Correspondence Solicited and Prices Sent on Application. 



THOMAS E. JEREMY, .JR. 



LEVI REED. 



THOa. J. ALMY. 




Jio. 5S pl. ^ixth "West street, ^alt Lal^s City. 



ORDERS RECEIVED FOR CAR LOAD LOTS. 



COAL DEPARTMENT, UNION PACIFIC RAILWAY. 







Ca.r:L37"or:L, 



^lesLse-3:i.t "TTa^lle^r- 



ROCK SPRING,— The Best Coal West of the Missouri River. 

RED CANYON.— The Cheapest Coal in the Market. 

PLEASANT VALLEY.— From the Well-known Utah Central Mines. 



For Domestic and Steam Purposes, and in all Sizes— LUMP, EGG, STOVE, 

MUT and SLACK. 

CLEAN COAL and PROMPT DELIVERIES, by the Ton or Car Load. 



OFIFIOE: SOI S. "ML^ILIST ST., 
Wasatch Corner. 



A. J. GUNNELL, 

General Agent. 

Telephone 240. F. B. SHELLY, Manager Yard. 




*, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in ♦* 

« 5 * 

A FuH Assortment of Acids, Dyes, Paints, Oils and Varnis/tes, Trusses, Toilet Articles, Imported 

and Domestic Perfumeries. 

«• Agents for the Celebrated HOLDFAST Sc. CIGAR » 

H. E. Corner Main and Second South Streets, Salt Lake City, Utah. 



fje 



'lonccr 



oobs fflouse of 




THOMAS CARTER, 

155 S. Main St., Salt Lake City. 

Guns, Rifles, Pistols, Ammunition and general Sporting* Goods. 

Tfu Only Ge?iuine Thomson Waterproof Boot. Illustrated Catalogue for 18S7 Free en Application, 




=Tm> 




greenewalD's store. 




SALT LAKE CtTY FIRE DEPARTMENT. 




TAYLOR, ROMNtY. ARMSTRONG CO. 




THE above View represents the large POWER BUILDING now in course of erection at North Salt 
Lake — Kinney & Gourlay's new city addition — size 50 x 200 feet, three stories high, built of cut brown 
stone, iron and cement, and guaranteed to be fire-proof. The building will contain six rooms, each 
50x100 feet, which will be fitted up and especially designed for light manufacturing, the heat, power and electric 
light being furnished by the promoter. 



I iiNORTH SALT LAKD 



The new manufacturing and residence addition to Salt Lake City, is located adjoining the famous Hot Springs 
Lake, one of the most beautiful sheets of water in the country. The entire Kinney & Gourlay plat lies witiiiu 
the city limits, and is only two miles from Main Street, the principal business thoroughfare. Now is the time 
for Eastern 

---^peculators, flome-Buycrs ^ JVIanufacturers-^- 

To invest. Salt Lake City is certain to catch the great Western boom in a very short time, and such a chance 
for investment may not occur again. 

Maps and all necessary information furnished promptly on application. Correspondence especially 
solicited from home-buyers and manufacturers. 

I Wll tlVl 4W41 % m^km tt f^et tl¥ Sllli 

To Manufacturers Who will Start Industries Tliereon. 

I-.. ID. lE^iisrnsrE^-, p^ieoi=. 



-sEirr) iFOK.- 



(( 



THE SALT LAKE ENTERPRISE," 



An Eight-Page Weekly, Published by The Enterprise Publishing Co., Devoted to the Resources of Utah, 

If you wish to get correct information in regard to the richest and most beautiful country in the United Statee. 




MITCHELL 

AND 

BAIN 
WAGONS. 



JOHN DEERE 

AND 

Oliver Chilled 
PLOWS. 



HEBER J. GRANT, President. 

J. F. GRANT, Vice-President and Manager 

GEO. T. ODELL, Assistant Manager and Treasurer. 
R. S. WELLS, Secretary 




DIRECTORS: 



HEBER J. Grant. 

G. T. Odell. 

John Henry Smith. 
C. 8. Burton. 



J F. Grant. 

F. M. Lyman. 

Orson A. Woolley. 

W. W. RITER. 



J. F. Wells. 

Geo. Romney. 



Jos. F. Smith. 




MASSILLON OR RUSSELL THRESHERS. 




WOOD 

AND 

CHAMPION 
MACHINES. 



BUGGIES 

AND 

SPRING 
WAGONS. 




Z. C. M. I. STORfc 




FOX &. bYMUNb KMUIUbKAKHIC PARLORS. 



RESIDENCE OF E. A. FOLLAND. 



->=<HIE;ST.A.BXjISI€:EX3 1846i^- 



Now Occupies over 500 ACRES IN CULTIVATION of 

FEUJT AND OEMMENTAL TREES, ROSES, SHRITBS, ETC. 




PIFil 



H c 


<: g crcfQ 


3- 3 


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HP gS-'a Z3^S O 

2^§.^aq^33- 
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L.;>rO<:!r3- t«Cn> 

> regS2rew„3^ 
t^ tLT3 .==-n -O g- ° 2 "^ 



©■ 


p ■(/, re p C r^ 
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lastt 
nd 
ghan 
y Sa 
three 
tions 
sfied 
that 


— 


wo ye 

n my 
City 
muel 
years 
; and 
with t 
can b 


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re 3-.cr- c/) p 




rs pu 
visit 
and 
mith 
whic 
y enc 
eir tr 
relie 




^S s.=^p 3 0^?! 




c'"n.?3g~'3- 




•Op3reCL^— p 




§ = ^ S p = g re 




Fruit 
throu 
saw t 
ents 
ery fi 
f the 
fruit, 
for fir 






S- 3 3-W, J 




ees fror 
the va 
orchar 
the G« 
and fa 
ners I 
am pi 
lass frt 



>_; CO -• 



65 re 3 ^ 



TJTJ^H: iq"TJie/SEI?.ir COnyEDP^A^l^"^, (J- a. goodhue, President.) 

p. o. Bom 453. G-ElsTBI^^I-i "VSTESTElI^l^ j?^a-E3^TS, 
w; S-i^LT L^^I^E CIT^^-. :^ 



J. J. SNELL & CO., 

posTOFFiCE Building, Salt I^ake C'ty, Utah. 

HOUSES, LOTS & FARMS FOR SALL 



HOUSES FOR RENT. RENTS COLLECTED. 

COURT SCRIPT BOUGHT. MONEY TO LOAN. 



Tliirty "^ears oaa. tli.e G-ro-va.33.d., 




DR. REED, 

Chronic & Special Diseases. 

Sl>icl,iiilia uud liije Qlaaaen filled 
to Order. Lengea in Ocean Blue 
and London Smoke. Sp-cial At 
tention J'aid to Filting Jrii 
ficial Hyes. Consultation J-'ree. 



—The Sign of— 

THE BIG EYES, 

50 E. Second South Street, 
SALT LAKE CITY. 




MRS. S. R. STANLEY, Proprieior. 

]VIanufacturep of staple \ pancy Cra&l^ers, 

Cor. Second AVest and Seventh South Sts., 
p. o. Box V97. S.JL.1L,T Xj.i5^:K:E CIT^^- 



A// Orders Promptly Attended to. 



B. JAiaES & CO'.. 



^ PLUMBERS, ^ 



No. 67 Main Street, 

p, 0. Bo.x 306. ©AnT l!xAKB. CxlTY. 



W. G. BROWN, Gen. Aot., 

Denver, Colorado. 



H. E. SPBAGUE, PRESIDENT. 

New York City. 



A. H. DANFORTH, V. P. AND GEN. MGR., 

South Pueblo, Colorado. 



The Golorado Go/il & iron Gompany, 

Blast Furnaces, Steel Works & Rclling Mills, Located at South Pueblo, Colo. 

Gas and Blacksmithing Coals and Coke, Steel Rails, Blooms and Billets, Mining 

Rails, Splice Bars, Spikes, Bolts and Nuts, Steel Nails, Pig iron, 

Bar iron. Cast iron Pipe for Water and Gas. 




J 



WESTERN SALES AGENCY, SALT LAKE CITY. w. a. wetmore, Agt. 

OSlTn & PARK, '^ ^ 

^^THB LEADING JISWELEHH^ 
Salt Lake City, Utah, and Leadville, Colorado. 

Iuil)oiter.s and Mamifactiuer.s, Headtjuarter.s for Eveiything in the Ijine of Watches, 
Diainond.s, Jewelry, Silverware, Fancy Goods and Novelties. 

Orders for Medals, Badges and Prize Cups Filled at Short Notice. 
WATCHES DE-MflGNETIZED. 

JOSLIN & PAR/UTfslMirSt^t, Salt Lake City. 






¥ 






*5 







JENNINGS' RtSIDENCtS. 



D. & R. G. PLEASANT VALLEY COAL AGENCY, 



-Dealer in 



Pleasant Valley Lump, Egg", Nut and Slack 



Anthracite, Colorado Blacksmith Coal, Charcoal, Pig Iron, Coke, Wood, Etc., Constantly on Hand. 

Orders Solicited and Promptly Filled. P. O. Box 614. Yards: Cor. Second South and sih West Streets. 

OFFICE: 145 S. Main Street, SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. 

Telephone No. 179. ^^ \2. WILLIAMS, Agent and Manager. 



/" 



f^€imisri>iMe«?^ 



Tlie Most Complete, and Reliable Candy House hi. the West. 



Wholesale Dealers, Importers ^^ ^ 

and Jobbers will find it to their ad 
vantage to carry our Goods, as they can get 
them FEESH FROM THE FAC- 
TORY in Quantities to suit their 
Trade, thus avoiding old stale 
stock. 



:to850E, FirstMliStr 

SALT LAKE CITY. 



•av 



0* 



0>> 



^ 



*/&« 



,<»' 



,**", 



All our good^^ are A No. 1, 
We make no Second-Class Candies, 

and will not adulterate under any dreiim- 
stances. Our Goods are carried by all 
the Eeliable. Wholesale Homes- 
in the Country. 



0^ 



v%^< 






^^ 



Dealers in 
general will do well to instruct 
their Grocers and Jobbers to send them 
TUCKETT'S Candies, thus insuring a good fresh 
^ Saleable Article. Always open to inspection. 




GENERAL DEALERS IN 



MBBIi: 



i^lMPORTERS AND DEALERS \t*&^ 

GRAIN, 

FLOyR, 

I SECBS. 

eneppED teed, 

33 -^77-. IFirst So"a.tli. Street, 






p. O. Box 762. SJLLT HjJ^KIE city. 







"WE J^-R-E, THE — 



PIONEER REAL ESTATE FIRM 



And have a thorough knowledge of all Projierties, and their 
value, in and around SALT LAKE CITY. We have Choice 
Homes, we have Rich Farms and Farming Land, we have 
Improved and Unimproved Lots, we have Lands in Small and 
Large Tracts mljoining and in tlie immediate vicinity of this 
City. We respectfully invite the attention of those wishing to 
Purchase or Sell REAL ESTATE in this vicinity; also those 
wisliing to BORROW or LOAN MONEY. Plea.se call on 
or correspond with us at your earliest convenience, as Property 
is steadily advancing 

FULTON & SMITH, 

SJLXjT LJLICE OITIT. 






I. 



Es 



-Importers and- 



lyiiio^j^^^a^ 




M 



S^f^LT I_,^A^I^E (DIITir^ 

Respectfully invite attention to their I^arge and Complete Stock of 

Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals^ Assay Goods 

BALANCES, FURNACES, MORTARS, TEST LEAD WEIGHTS, CRUCIBLES, TONGS & GLASSWARE, 

Comprising Everything Wanted in the Trade. 



•mm Aviji 




RESIDENCE OF J. C. CONKLIN, 




/V L '"JIC-'ARD'S WAREHOUSE. 




JOSEPHITt 



ST. MARY'S SCHOOL. 



L. C. Pabke, 

Prcxidcnf. 



B. T. Lacy, 
Vice-President. 



C. P. Mason, 

Manage) 




TAH & MONTANA MACHINERY GO., 



(INCORPORATED) 



Agency Union Iron Works, San Francisco, California. 
The Leading Machinery Establishment of the West. 

CiirninfT in stock tor iiiinieiliate sliipnicnt: Lidr/crirond JInisfiitf/ Engine.^, 
Iiigcrsi)// Aij- CoinpreK>toi:s (uid Rock Drillx, Know'/cx Steam Pinnp.s, Boilcrx, 

Vniical and Horizontal Enginex, Horse Wliiinn, Wire Boj/e, ]Vcstinglioiixe 
Aiifohiatic Engines, Bed Luhric(ding Oils, Potrder, En.se, Caps, (htx and 

Water Pipe, Brass and Iron Fitting.^, Packing, Latest Iniprored Wooden 
Pulleys, Miners Tools, Sight-Feed Lnhricafnrs, Fairbanks' Standard Scales, 

Blou-ers and Fans, 3Iine, Mill and Smelter Siiunlies, Best Oeta(/on (Uid Grooved 
Drill Steel. 

Contractors for furnishing and erecting Stamp Mills, Smelters, Concentra- 
ting Phtnts, Etc., Etc. E.irlusire Agency for Wall'.s Patent Corrugated Rolls 
and Vanning Jigs. 

Office and Warehouse, 25c) g. ]Waiii Street, llnion Blocl^, 

INGERSOUL ECLIPSE ROCK DRILL SALT LAKE CITY. 

Agency, Butte, Montana. See View of our Establishment in lialf p.ioc Engraving of Union Block, Main St. 





PAVEY, WALDEN & CO., 



^iyiiiijxjicjiViji: 



Wooden and Wlllowware, 



Grocers' and Hardware Sundries. 



74 West 

s.i^3i.T i^^?^:k::e] cit^s^. 




Our Goods are 
Strigtly ALL Wool 



LARGE ST 

Do shoddy used about tt^eA^ill 

V» unkica-r nnnnc^ a i\in i n\ki ODin 



HONEST GOODS AND LO\N PRICES. 



WE MANUFACTURE 

PUAIN AND FANCY DRESS FLANNELS, YARNS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, 

DRESS LINSEYS, BLANKETS THE BEST IN THE WORLD. 

CASSIMERES, SHAWLS ETC., ETC. 

AODRESS 



PROYO M/INUF/ICTURING CO. 



REED SMOOT, Sup I 



PROVO CITY. UTAH, 



■^s^m. 



fc,SSS?K» 



AUG.GftST BANKNQTE&LnH0.CO-STLBUlSaN.X 




■f LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



■ z,i-z.-i:^ 




VV-*-:?^: 



"'"^^ 





..SJ'WV. 




